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Predictors of acute care utilization and acute pain treatment outcomes in adults with sickle cell disease: The role of non‐hematologic characteristics and baseline chronic opioid dose
Author(s) -
Carroll C. Patrick,
Cichowitz Cody,
Yu Tiffany,
Olagbaju Yetunde O.,
Nelson Julie Anne,
Campbell Timothy,
Lanzkron Sophie
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
american journal of hematology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.456
H-Index - 105
eISSN - 1096-8652
pISSN - 0361-8609
DOI - 10.1002/ajh.25168
Subject(s) - medicine , opioid , observational study , socioeconomic status , emergency department , disease , anxiety , prospective cohort study , acute care , emergency medicine , chronic pain , acute pain , health care , physical therapy , intensive care medicine , psychiatry , anesthesia , population , receptor , environmental health , economics , economic growth
Despite its rarity in the United States, sickle cell disease accounts for a disproportionate amount of healthcare utilization and costs. The majority of this is due to acute care for painful crises. A small subpopulation of patients accounts for most these costs due to frequent visits to emergency departments and acute care facilities. Previous investigations have found that these high utilizing patients are distinguished by both a more severe disease course and certain non‐hematologic characteristics, which may include higher socioeconomic status and some psychiatric and psychological characteristics. This prospective observational cohort study was undertaken to test the ability of these characteristics to prospectively predict acute pain care outcomes, including visit frequency, total opioid doses, and pain improvement at the Johns Hopkins Sickle Cell Infusion Center (SCIC). Seventy‐three participants were followed for 12 months and SCIC utilization and treatment outcomes were tabulated for 378 visits. Participants who visited the SCIC most frequently had markedly worse pain improvement despite higher within‐visit opioid doses. Higher utilization was associated with indicators of greater illness severity, more aggressive treatment for sickle cell disease, higher baseline opioid doses, higher socioeconomic status, greater pain‐related anxiety, and a history of psychiatric treatment. Overall, poor acute pain treatment response was associated with higher utilization and higher baseline opioid doses. The pattern of association between high utilization, poor acute care outcomes, and higher baseline opioid doses is discussed in terms of prior research and future directions.