• Chest · Mar 2020

    Screening heroin smokers attending community drug clinics for change in lung function: A cohort study: Lung function decline in inhaled drug users.

    • Rebecca Nightingale, Kevin Mortimer, Emanuele Giorgi, Paul P Walker, Marie Stolbrink, Tara Byrne, Kerry Marwood, Sally Morrison-Griffiths, Susan Renwick, Jamie Rylance, and Hassan Burhan.
    • Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, England.
    • Chest. 2020 Mar 1; 157 (3): 558-565.

    BackgroundHeroin smokers have high rates of COPD, respiratory morbidity, hospital admission, and mortality. We assessed the natural history of symptoms and lung function in this population over time.MethodsA cohort of heroin smokers with COPD was followed for 18 to 24 months. At baseline and follow-up, respiratory symptoms were measured by the Medical Research Council Dyspnea Scale (MRC) and the COPD Assessment Tool (CAT), and postbronchodilator spirometry was performed. Frequency of health-care-seeking episodes was extracted from routine health records. Parametric, nonparametric, and linear regression models were used to analyze the change in symptoms and lung function over time.ResultsOf 372 participants originally recruited, 161 were assessed at follow-up (mean age, 51.0 ± 5.3 years; 74 women [46%]) and 106 participants completed postbronchodilator spirometry. All participants were current or previous heroin smokers, and 122 (75.8%) had smoked crack. Symptoms increased over time (MRC score increased by 0.48 points per year, P < .001; CAT score increased by 1.60 points per year, P < .001). FEV1 declined annually by 90 ± 190 mL (P < .001). This deterioration was not associated with change in tobacco or heroin smoking status or use of inhaled medications.ConclusionsHeroin smokers experience a high and increasing burden of chronic respiratory symptoms and a decline in FEV1 that exceeds the normal age-related decline observed among tobacco smokers with COPD and healthy nonsmokers. Targeted COPD diagnostic and treatment services hosted within opiate substitution services could benefit this vulnerable, relatively inaccessible, and underserved group of people.Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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