Background: Understanding the potential impact of cocaine use on health is increasingly important as cocaine use rises in the U.S.
Objectives: This study evaluated the associations of regular cocaine use, with and without tobacco co-use, with cardiovascular and respiratory outcomes.
Methods: Analysis of a limited dataset obtained through IBM Watson Health Explorys, a platform integrating electronic health record data. Matched controls were defined for: 1) cocaine-using patients (n = 8244; 44 % female); and subgroups of cocaine-using patients: 2) with an encounter diagnosis for tobacco use disorder (TUD; n = 4706); and 3) without a TUD diagnosis (non-TUD; n = 3538). Patients had at least one documented medical evaluation in the MetroHealth System (Cleveland, Ohio). Cocaine-using patients had an encounter diagnosis of cocaine abuse/dependence and/or ≥2 cocaine-positive drug screens. Control patients, with no documented cocaine-use, were matched to the cocaine-using patients on demographics, residential zip code median income, body mass index, and, for the total sample, TUD-status. Outcomes were encounter diagnosis (yes/no) of cerebrovascular accident, heart arrhythmia, myocardial infarction, subarachnoid hemorrhage, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), pneumonia, and all-cause mortality.
Results: TUD-patients had the greatest prevalence of cardiovascular and respiratory disease, regardless of cocaine-use indication. In the total sample, TUD, and non-TUD subgroups, regular cocaine use was significantly associated with greater risk for cerebrovascular accident, arrhythmia, myocardial infarction, asthma, COPD, pneumonia and mortality.
Conclusions: Cocaine use is associated with significantly greater risk of adverse cardiovascular and respiratory diagnoses and all-cause mortality.
Keywords: Cardiovascular; Cocaine; Electronic health record (EHR); Mortality; Respiratory.
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