Abstract

BackgroundPatients who present to the hospital for infectious complications of intravenous opioid use are at high risk for against-medical-advice discharge and readmissions. The role of medication-assisted treatment for inpatients is not clear. We aimed to assess outcomes prior to and after rollout of an inpatient buprenorphine-based opioid use disorder protocol, as well as to assess outcomes in general for medication-assisted therapy. MethodsThis was a retrospective observational cohort study at our community hospital in New Hampshire. The medical record was searched for inpatients with a complication of intravenous opioid use. We searched for admissions 11 months prior to and after the November 2018 buprenorphine protocol rollout. ResultsRates of medication-assisted therapy usage and buprenorphine linkage increased significantly after protocol rollout. Rates of against-medical-advice discharge did not decrease after protocol rollout, nor did readmissions. However, when evaluating the entire group of patients regardless of date of presentation or protocol use, against-medical-advice discharge rates were substantially lower for patients receiving medication-assisted therapy compared with those receiving supportive care only (30.0% vs 59.6%). Readmissions rates were lower for patients who were discharged with any form of ongoing medication-assisted therapy compared with those who were not (30-day all-cause readmissions 18.8% vs 35.1%; 30-day opioid-related readmissions 10.1% vs 29.9%; 90-day all-cause readmissions 27.3% vs 42.7%; 90-day opioid-related readmissions 15.1% vs 33.3%). ConclusionsThere is a strong association between medication-assisted therapy and reduced against-medical-advice discharge rates. Additionally, maintenance medication-assisted therapy at time of discharge is strongly associated with reduced readmissions rates.

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