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Prescription opioid use before and after heart transplant: Associations with posttransplant outcomes.

Krista L LentineKevin S ShahJon A KobashigawaHuiling XiaoZidong ZhangDavid A AxelrodNgan N LamDorry L SegevMara Ann McAdams-DeMarcoHenry RandallGregory P HessHui YuanLuke S VestBertram L KasiskeMark A Schnitzler
Published in: American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons (2019)
Impacts of the prescription opioid epidemic have not yet been examined in the context of heart transplantation. We examined a novel database in which national U.S. transplant registry records were linked to a large pharmaceutical claims warehouse (2007-2016) to characterize prescription opioid use before and after heart transplant, and associations (adjusted hazard ratio, 95% LCL aHR95% UCL ) with death and graft loss. Among 13 958 eligible patients, 40% filled opioids in the year before transplant. Use was more common among recipients who were female, white, or unemployed, or who underwent transplant in more recent years. Of those with the highest level of pretransplant opioid use, 71% continued opioid use posttransplant. Pretransplant use had graded associations with 1-year posttransplant outcomes; compared with no use, the highest-level use (>1000 mg morphine equivalents) predicted 33% increased risk of death (aHR 1.10 1.331.61 ) in the year after transplant. Risk relationships with opioid use in the first year posttransplant were stronger, with highest level use predicting 70% higher mortality (aHR 1.46 1.701.98 ) over the subsequent 4 years (from >1 to 5 years posttransplant). While associations may, in part, reflect underlying conditions or behaviors, opioid use history is relevant in assessing and providing care to transplant candidates and recipients.
Keyphrases
  • heart failure
  • chronic pain
  • pain management
  • atrial fibrillation
  • emergency department
  • ejection fraction
  • cardiovascular disease
  • palliative care
  • type diabetes
  • newly diagnosed
  • health insurance
  • insulin resistance