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Epidemiology Steven Shoptaw, Ph.D. October 7, 2004 Important Concepts in Drug Abuse and Dependence • • Prevalence: The total number or percentage of cases of a disease in a population at a given time Incidence: The extent or rate of occurrence, especially the number of new cases of a disease in a population over a period of time. Definitional Problems • Drug abuse/dependence is a behaviorally defined “disease” or disorder – No pathogens or biological indicators of the condition Medical/Biological Understanding “Addiction is brain disease.” Alan Leshner, Ph.D. Moral/Choice Model “You can look at [scans of] brains all day. They can be lit up like Christmas trees. But unless a person behaves in a certain way, we wouldn't call them an addict.” Sally Satel, M.D. Normal Development • Teens and early adolescence marked by regular sampling of mind-altering substances, run-ins with the law, problems with parents, financial problems, and intense conflicted relationships • The vast majority, however, resolve this condition and become regular taxpayers Differential • No known medical condition • No diagnosable psychiatric condition – Axis I OR Axis II • Behaviors don’t remit despite pressure from powerful external forces (e.g., jail, spouse, employer) Natural History of Opioid Abuse 30 Days Used in 30 25 20 1st treatment episode Jail 15 10 5 Dependence Diagnosis 0 10 20 Abuse Diagnosis 30 40 50 60 70+ Decade of Life Apologies to Doug Anglin Natural History of Stimulant Abuse 12 Jail 10 Days Used in 30 1st treatment episode 8 6 4 2 Dependence Diagnosis 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70+ Decade of Life Abuse Diagnosis Apologies to Doug Anglin Heavy Drinking Days in 30 Natural History of Alcohol Abuse 16 14 1st treatment episode UCLA 12 10 8 6 $$ $$ 4 2 0 Dependence Diagnosis Abuse Diagnosis 10 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 60+ Decade of Life Apologies to Doug Anglin Sentinels • Monitoring the Future – 30 years of cross-sectional survey of 50,000 8th, 10th and 12th graders on drug use – Online database, with tables and figures of highest relevance available at: www.monitoringthefuture.org 5+ Drinks, Last 2 Weeks 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 8th Grade 10th Grade 12th Grade www.monitoringthefuture.org, 2004 Cigarettes, Past Year www.monitoringthefuture.org, 2004 Cigarettes, 10+ Per Day 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 8th Grade 10th Grade 12th Grade www.monitoringthefuture.org, 2004 Annual Prevalence of Illicit Drug Use Index www.monitoringthefuture.org, 2004 Methamphetamine Use, Past Year www.monitoringthefuture.org, 2004 Amphetamine Use, Past Year www.monitoringthefuture.org, 2004 LSD Use, Past Year www.monitoringthefuture.org, 2004 More Sentinels • National Household Survey on Drug Abuse (NHSDA) • Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) • Drug and Alcohol Services Information System (DASIS) • Community Epidemiology Work Group (CEWG) • Clinical Literature Prevalence - NHSDA, 2000 Illicit Drug Use Percent Admitting 45 40 35 30 25 Males Females 20 15 10 5 0 Ever Used Past Year Past Month Any Illicit Drug Use by Gender Illicit Drug Use, Past Month 1999, 2000, 2001 Percent Admitting 8 7 6 5 1999 2000 2001 4 3 2 1 0 Any Drug M.J. Prescriptn Cocaine Prevalence – NHSDA, 2000 Cigarette Use by Gender Percent Admitting 80 70 60 50 Males Females 40 30 20 10 0 Ever Used Past Year Past Month Cigarettes • While 45% of Americans smoked in 1960s, 23% of general population now smoke cigarettes (CDC, 2002; Giovino, 2002) • ~430,000 Americans die of smoking-related causes (Giovino, 2002) • Treatment-refractory group (George & O’Malley 2004) – Lower educational attainment, less interest in behavioral treatments that assist cessation, and medical psychiatric and substance abuse comorbidities – Increasing percentage of smokers are women Natural History of Smoking • Early smokers (started before age 15) are more likely to progress to daily smoking than those who started smoking later • Daily smokers more likely to be dependent than non-daily smokers • Quit attempts more successful for smokers who begin after age 15 Kandel et al 2004 Smoking in Past Month by Ethnicity - NHSDA, 2000 0 10 20 30 40 50 Cuban Central/S.A. Puerto Rico Mexican Vietnamese Korean Japanese Filipino Chinese Am Ind/Alaska Black White Substance Use by Cigarette Smoking, Past Month, 2000 Percent Admitting 45 40 35 30 25 Smokers NonSmokers 20 15 10 5 0 Any Illicit Binge Etoh Heavy Etoh Phenomenology: Seriously Mentally Ill Who Smoke • Cigarette smoking associates with psychotic symptoms in bipolar disorder (Corvin et al., 2001) • Schizophrenics often heavily dependent smokers with great difficulty in cessation (Dalack et al., 1998) – Low motivation to quit; interaction between nicotine and negative affective symptoms (Ziedonis et al., 1997) Epidemiology: SMI and Smoking • 70-90% of chronic schizophrenics smoke cigarettes (Glassman, 1993; George, 1997) • In psychiatric outpatients, schizophrenics have highest smoking rates (Hughes, 1992) • Patients with bipolar disorder smoke at higher rates than general population, but lower than schizophrenics (Diwan et al., 1998) Substance Use, Past Year by Serious Mental Illness: 2001 Percent Admitting 45 40 35 30 25 SMI No SMI 20 15 10 5 0 Illicit Drug Cigarettes Binge Etoh Percent Diagnosed Past Year Substance Abuse or Dependence by SMI: 2001 25 20 15 SMI No SMI 10 5 0 Drugs/Etoh Drugs Only Etoh Only Heroin Prevalence • Across years and across cultures, prevalence of heroin abuse is fairly stable at about 1.5% of the adult population. – Social upheaval linked to increases in heroin abuse (Afghanistan, Iraq, Russia) Cocaine Epi • Cocaine abuse: 1.7 million Americans – 400,000 crack cocaine abusers (SAMHSA, 2002) – Concentrated in urban areas and in ethnic and racial groups • Primary reason for treatment admission in African Americans after alcohol in LA County Methamphetamine Epi • Methamphetamine abuse: 600,000 Americans – Additional 500,000 abuse other amphetamine type stimulants (SAMHSA, 2000) • Fast growing problem with established use in West, new problems in South and Midwest (Rawson et al., 2002) • 20% increase in treatment admissions (DASIS, 2003) – Primary reason for admission in California after alcohol • International problem in Europe, S.E. Asia, Thailand, New Zealand and Australia Meth+amphetamine, DAWN www.oas.samhsa.gov, 2004 Eureka Police Department A classic example of what using methamphetamine for five years can do for your complexion. 1990 1995 The results of injecting illegal drugs into the muscle of an arm. How to recognize a drug lab Many people may be unaware that they're living near a meth lab. Here are some things to look for: •Late night secretive activity in a rural/farm area. •Unusual, strong odors (like cat urine, ether, ammonia, acetone or other chemicals). •Residences or buildings with windows blacked out. •Renters who pay their landlords in cash. (Most drug dealers trade exclusively in cash). •Lots of traffic - people coming and going at unusual times. There may be little traffic during the day, but at night the activity increases dramatically. •Excessive trash including large amounts of items such as: antifreeze containers, lantern fuel cans, red chemically stained coffee filters, drain cleaner and cold medicine. •Unusual amounts of clear glass containers being brought into the home. •The mixing of unusual chemicals in a house, garage or barn by persons not involved in the chemical industry. •Possession of unusual chemicals, such as large quantities of MEK, Coleman Fuel, Toluene, Acetone or cold/allergy medications. www.henrycty.com/sheriff/meth.html Amphetamine Treatment, 2001 www.oas.samhsa.gov, 2004 Infectious Diseases Associated with Substance Abuse • • • • • • Infective Endocarditis Gonorrhea/Syphilis/Chlamydia/other STDs Pneumonia Tuberculosis Viral Hepatitis and Liver Disease HIV Infectious Diseases Associated with Substance Abuse • Infective Endocarditis (i.e., staphylococcus aurcus) – Frequent among IDUs – 8-16% of hospital admissions for IDUs – Organism colonizes skin, also includes drug, adulterants, packaging, fluids – Occurs mostly to right side of heart – Most common symptom is chest pain, cough, fever, chills, arthralgia – Antibiotic treatment or surgery Infectious Diseases Associated with Substance Abuse • Gonorrhea/Chlamydia • Syphilis – Associates with MSM and non-injection drug use in Los Angeles County HIV Serostatus of LA County MSM Early Syphilis Cases 2002 (Provisional), n=406 Unknown 14% HIV30% HIV+ 56% Kerndt, 2003 Infectious Diseases Associated with Substance Abuse • Pneumonia – Most common reason for hospitalization for IDUs (38%) – Depression of gag reflex causes aspiration – Cigarette and other types of smoking damage lung function – Malnutrition hampers healing – HIV complications Infectious Diseases Associated with Substance Abuse • Pneumonia (Cont’d) – Fever, cough, chest pain, and breathing problems for several weeks – Pneumococcal pneumonia most common in substance abusers – Chest X-Rays, sputum sample, blood cultures, arterial blood gases – IV antibiotics treatment Infectious Disease Associated with Substance Abuse • Tuberculosis – about 1,000 active cases in LAC, 2003 – – – – Mycobacterium tuberculosis Airborne transmission 10% of infected individuals develop active TB More common among debilitated and immunocompromised – substance abusers Homeless HealthCare, LA 2004 Infectious Disease Associated with Substance Abuse • Hepatitis – Hep A, B, C, D… – 41-48% of IDUs have history of acute hepatitis – 2/3 have abnormal liver transaminase (AST, ALT, GGTP) – Hep A transmitted fecal-oral – Hep B transmitted through body fluids – Non A/Non B (Hep C) transmitted through injection and via sex Infectious Diseases Associated with Substance Abuse • Liver Disease – 2/3 have abnormal liver transaminase (AST, ALT,GTP) – Alcohol directly hepatotoxic, other drugs contribute – Methadone is NOT hepatotoxic - Naltrexone is at very high doses – Cocaine is hepatotoxic in animals and in humans at high doses – Cocaine hepatotoxic associated with hypotension and renal failure – Ethanol + Cocaine = Cocaethylene, extremely euphoragenic and toxic Infectious Diseases Associated with Substance Abuse • HIV – – – – IDU and sexual behavior risks IDU rate high in East (esp. among AA and LA) IDU rate low in West Value of testing and counseling in counseling Epi Can Strongly Inform HIVRelevant Research • Causality: Drug risks vary. While injection risk behaviors are directly tied to drug use, sexual risk behaviors are only associated with drug use • HIV Prevalence: Prevalence factors strongly inform the value of specific HIV-research programs – IDU-specialized HIV prevention research may have more value in East, Midwest, and South – Drug-related sexual risk reduction focus may have more value in West • Drug by Risk Interaction: Local differences in prevalence rates for specific drugs can direct the work U.S. Adult Male AIDS Cases by Risk Behavior by Year 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 MSM MSM+IDU IDU Hetero Other CDC, 2004 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 L.A. County Adult Male AIDS Cases by Risk Behavior by Year 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 MSM MSM+IDU IDU Hetero Other 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 L.A. County HIV Epi Pgm, 2004 U.S. Adult Female AIDS Cases by Risk Behavior by Year 70 60 50 IDU Hetero Other 40 30 20 10 CDC, 2004 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 L.A. County Adult Female AIDS Cases by Risk Behavior by Year 70 60 50 IDU Hetero Other 40 30 20 10 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 L.A. County HIV Epi Pgm, 2004 Local Prevalence Data Sharpens Understanding of HIV Epidemic In Los Angeles County, heroin injectors at low risk; gay male meth users at extreme risk 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 MMT-LAC Her-LAC Meth-HWD Meth-RC LAC HIV Epi (1999-2004); UCLA/ISAP (1998-2004) Methamphetamine and HIV in MSM: A time-to-response association? 100 Percent HIV+ 80 60 40 20 0 Probability Sample1 Street Recreational Outpatient Residential5 Outreach2 User3 Drug free4 1Deren et al., 1998, Molitor et al., 1998; 2Reback et al., in review; 3Reback, 1997; 4Shoptaw et al., 2002; 5VNRH, unpublished data The End • Open Every Talk with Local Epi • Use Social Math to Drive Home the Point – Make comparisons that are easy to understand and that use charts – not tables