PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Steep rise in drug use-associated infective endocarditis in West Virginia: Characteristics and healthcare utilization.

  • Ruchi Bhandari,
  • Talia Alexander,
  • Frank H Annie,
  • Umar Kaleem,
  • Affan Irfan,
  • Sudarshan Balla,
  • R Constance Wiener,
  • Chris Cook,
  • Aravinda Nanjundappa,
  • Mark Bates,
  • Ellen Thompson,
  • Gordon S Smith,
  • Judith Feinberg,
  • Melanie A Fisher

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0271510
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 7
p. e0271510

Abstract

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IntroductionLife-threatening infections such as infective endocarditis (IE) are increasing simultaneously with the injection drug use epidemic in West Virginia (WV). We utilized a newly developed, statewide database to describe epidemiologic characteristics and healthcare utilization among patients with (DU-IE) and without (non-DU-IE) drug use-associated IE in WV over five years.Materials and methodsThis retrospective, observational study, incorporating manual review of electronic medical records, included all patients aged 18-90 years who had their first admission for IE in any of the four university-affiliated referral hospitals in WV during 2014-2018. IE was identified using ICD-10-CM codes and confirmed by chart review. Demographics, clinical characteristics, and healthcare utilization were compared between patients with DU-IE and non-DU-IE using Chi-square/Fisher's exact test or Wilcoxon rank sum test. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was conducted with discharge against medical advice/in-hospital mortality vs. discharge alive as the outcome variable and drug use as the predictor variable.ResultsOverall 780 unique patients had confirmed first IE admission, with a six-fold increase during study period (p = .004). Most patients (70.9%) had used drugs before hospital admission, primarily by injection. Compared to patients with non-DU-IE, patients with DU-IE were significantly younger (median age: 33.9 vs. 64.1 years; p Discussion and conclusionThis multisite study reveals a 681% increase in IE admissions in WV over five years primarily attributable to injection drug use, underscoring the urgent need for both prevention efforts and specialized strategies to improve outcomes.