Peer Reviewed
1
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-2011
Keywords
Adolescent, Adult, Cohort Studies, Databases, Factual, Female, Humans, Lung Diseases, Male, Medical Records, Methadone, Middle Aged, Opiate Substitution Treatment, Opioid-Related Disorders, Patient Dropouts, Prescriptions, Risk, Time Factors, Young Adult
Abstract
This study aims to identify periods of elevated risk of drug related mortality during methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) in primary care using a cohort of 3,162 Scottish drug users between January 1993 and February 2004. Deaths occuring during treatment or within 3 days after last methadone prescription expired were considered as cases “on treatment”. Fatalities occuring 4 days or more after leaving treatment were cases “off treatment”. 64 drug related deaths were identified. The greatest risk of drug related death was in the first 2 weeks of treatment (Adjusted hazard ratio 2.60, 95% CI 1.03 to 6.56). Risk of drug related death was lower after the first 30 days following treatment cessation, relative to the first 30 days off treatment. History of psychiatric admission was associated with increased risk of drug related death in treatment. Increasing numbers of treatment episodes and urine testing were protective. History of psychiatric admission, increasing numbers of urine tests and co-prescriptions of benzodiazepines increased the risk of mortality out of treatment. The risk of drug related mortality in MMT is elevated during periods of treatment transition, specifically treatment intitiation and the first 30 days following treatment drop-out or discharge.
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
Citation
Cousins G, Teljeur C, Motterlini N, McCown C, Dimitrov BD, Fahey T. Risk of drug related mortality during periods of transition in methadone maintenance treatment: a cohort study. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment. 2011;41(3):252-260.
PubMed ID
21696913
Link to this item at
http://epubs.rcsi.ie/gpart/24/
DOI Link
10.1016/j.jsat.2011.05.001
Comments
This article is also available at http://www.sciencedirect.com.proxy.library.rcsi.ie/science/article/pii/S0740547211000973