Abstract

Opioid abuse is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States, and injection drug use (IDU) is a common form of opioid abuse. IDU is a major risk factor for infections including infective endocarditis (IE). To determine the prevalence of opioid abuse among patients with IE in both patient problem lists and diagnostic codes and describe underlying patient characteristics. A retrospective chart review from 1-1-2010 to 11-19-2018 of a large academic medical center's patients with documented IE was performed. Demographic, comorbidity, opioid prescription data and records of drug abuse in both the patient's problem list and ICD9/10 codes were recorded. Of the 796 patients with documented IE, 105 patients (13.2%) had opioid abuse or related IDU in their problem list, but only 22 received an ICD-9/10 code associated with drug abuse. IE patients with opioid abuse were generally younger (43.6 vs 61.7 years [P<0.001]), had fewer chronic comorbidities, and were prescribed opioids more often (86.7% vs 53.8% [P<0.001]). Opioid abuse and IDU are commonly recorded in the problem list of patients with IE, but opioid abuse is frequently not listed as a diagnosis in administrative billing codes.

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