Suicidality as a predictor of overdose among patients with substance use disorders.

Increasing rates of overdose and overdose deaths are a significant public health problem. Research has examined co-occurring mental health conditions, including suicidality, as a risk factor for intentional and unintentional overdose among individuals with substance use disorder (SUD). However, this research has been limited to single site studies of self-reported outcomes.

The current research evaluated suicidality as a predictor of overdose events in 2541 participants who use substances enrolled across eight multi-site clinical trials completed within the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network between 2012 to 2021 (CTN-0037, -0049, -0051, -0053, -0054, -0064, -0067, and -0068). The trials assessed baseline suicidality with the Concise Health Risk Tracking Self-Report (CHRT-SR). Overdose events were determined by reports of adverse events, cause of death, or hospitalization due to substance overdose, and verified through a rigorous adjudication process. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to assess continuous CHRT-SR score as a predictor of overdose, controlling for covariates.

CHRT-SR score was associated with overdose events (p=0.03) during the trial; the likelihood of overdose increased as continuous CHRT score increased (OR 1.02). Participants with lifetime heroin use were more likely to overdose (OR 3.08).

Conclusions: Response to the marked rise in overdose deaths should integrate suicide risk reduction as part of prevention strategies.

Related protocols: CTN-0037, CTN-0049, CTN-0051, CTN-0053, CTN-0054, CTN-0064, CTN-0067, CTN-0068

Categories: CTN platform/ancillary study, Overdose, Suicide
Tags: Article (Peer-Reviewed)
Authors: Horigian, Viviana E.; Schmidt, Renae D.; Shmueli-Blumberg, Dikla; Hefner, Kathryn; Feinberg, Judith; Kondapaka, Radhika; Feaster, Daniel J.; Duan, Rui; Gonzalez, Sophia; Davis, Carly; Marin-Navarrete, Rodrigo; Tross, Susan
PMCID: PMC9657076
PMID: 36362628
Source: Journal of Clinical Medicine 2022;11(21):6400. [doi: 10.3390/jcm11216400]