TY - JOUR
T1 - Addiction management in hospitalized patients with intravenous drug use-associated infective endocarditis
AU - Ray, Vani
AU - Waite, Mindy
AU - Spexarth, Frank C
AU - Korman, Sandra
AU - Berget, Susan
AU - Kodali, Soumya
AU - Kress, David C
AU - Guenther, Neil
AU - Murthy, Vishnubhakta S
AU - Internal Medicine Faculty, Aurora
N1 - Ray V, Waite MR, Spexarth FC, et al. Addiction management in hospitalized patients with intravenous drug use-associated infectiveendocarditis. Psychosomatics. 2020;61(6):678-687.doi: 10.1016/j.psym.2020.06.019
PY - 2020/11/1
Y1 - 2020/11/1
N2 - BACKGROUND: Infections related to intravenous drug use and opioid use disorders (OUDs) are increasing nationwide. Endocarditis is a recognized complication of intravenous drug use, and inpatient treatment typically focuses on infection management without attention to underlying addiction. OBJECTIVE: A comprehensive intervention for inpatients with infective endocarditis and intravenous drug use was implemented by a multidisciplinary team at a large midwestern hospital. The team included behavioral health/addiction medicine, infectious disease, pain medicine, cardiothoracic surgery, pharmacy, and nursing to address the OUD while managing the infection. The intervention was assessed by measuring the initiation of medication-assisted treatment and endocarditis-related readmissions. METHODS: Patients were identified from the medical records using discharge diagnosis codes for OUDs and infective endocarditis. In addition to medical management of infective endocarditis, the multidisciplinary intervention included early involvement of addiction medicine and the pain management at the time of admission. Patient interventions included education, motivational interviewing, behavioral health engagement, collaborative pain management, individual/family therapy, medication evaluation, and initiation of medication-assisted treatment. Caregivers were also educated on OUDs and ways to support patients undergoing interventions. RESULTS: Both the historical control group (N = 37) and the intervention group (N = 33) were comparable in age, gender, race, marital status, psychiatric history, and smoking but differed by employment status, religious affiliation, and use of psychiatric medications. At discharge, 18.9% of the control group and 54.5% in the intervention group were initiated on medication-assisted treatment for OUDs. No differences in readmission rates were found. CONCLUSION: Multidisciplinary teams for treating inpatients with intravenous drug use and infective endocarditis are feasible and can increase the uptake of OUD-specific treatment.
AB - BACKGROUND: Infections related to intravenous drug use and opioid use disorders (OUDs) are increasing nationwide. Endocarditis is a recognized complication of intravenous drug use, and inpatient treatment typically focuses on infection management without attention to underlying addiction. OBJECTIVE: A comprehensive intervention for inpatients with infective endocarditis and intravenous drug use was implemented by a multidisciplinary team at a large midwestern hospital. The team included behavioral health/addiction medicine, infectious disease, pain medicine, cardiothoracic surgery, pharmacy, and nursing to address the OUD while managing the infection. The intervention was assessed by measuring the initiation of medication-assisted treatment and endocarditis-related readmissions. METHODS: Patients were identified from the medical records using discharge diagnosis codes for OUDs and infective endocarditis. In addition to medical management of infective endocarditis, the multidisciplinary intervention included early involvement of addiction medicine and the pain management at the time of admission. Patient interventions included education, motivational interviewing, behavioral health engagement, collaborative pain management, individual/family therapy, medication evaluation, and initiation of medication-assisted treatment. Caregivers were also educated on OUDs and ways to support patients undergoing interventions. RESULTS: Both the historical control group (N = 37) and the intervention group (N = 33) were comparable in age, gender, race, marital status, psychiatric history, and smoking but differed by employment status, religious affiliation, and use of psychiatric medications. At discharge, 18.9% of the control group and 54.5% in the intervention group were initiated on medication-assisted treatment for OUDs. No differences in readmission rates were found. CONCLUSION: Multidisciplinary teams for treating inpatients with intravenous drug use and infective endocarditis are feasible and can increase the uptake of OUD-specific treatment.
KW - addiction
KW - cardiovascular surgery
KW - inpatient
KW - medication-assisted treatment
KW - multidisciplinary team
KW - opioid use disorders
UR - https://institutionalrepository.aah.org/medicinefaculty/6
UR - https://xk8bg6rv9a.search.serialssolutions.com/?sid=Entrez:PubMed&id=pmid:32778422
U2 - 10.1016/j.psym.2020.06.019
DO - 10.1016/j.psym.2020.06.019
M3 - Article
JO - Psychosomatics
JF - Psychosomatics
ER -