The Columbus Dispatch

Smokers, users more prone to COVID-19

- Terry Demio

If you smoke tobacco or marijuana frequently, if you’re addicted to alcohol or opioids, you’re more likely to experience breakthrou­gh COVID-19 – or getting the virus even after you’re vaccinated, a new study shows.

The national study from researcher­s at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland also shows that co-occurring health conditions and adverse socioecono­mic health factors, which are more common in people with substance use disorders than those without, are largely responsibl­e for the greater risk of breakthrou­gh infections.

“Overall, people with substance use disorder have a high risk of getting COVID-19,” said lead author Rong Xu, professor of biomedical informatic­s and director of the Center for Artificial Intelligen­ce in Drug Discovery at the Case Western Reserve School of Medicine. “The risk of breakthrou­gh infection is also higher.”

And those with substance use disorders also had higher rates of hospitaliz­ation and death, after breakthrou­gh infections.

“These results emphasize that the same risk factors that affected COVID-19 severity before vaccine was available are still risk factors in breakthrou­gh infections,” said Pamela Davis, dean emerita and Arline and Curtis Garvin Research professor at Case Western who is another of the study’s lead authors. “This means that care for ongoing conditions aside from COVID-19 remains very important for both patients and physicians to reduce overall disease morbidity.”

Xu said COVID-19 vaccines are “highly effective” and people with substance use disorders should get vaccinated.

Addiction specialist­s in the Cincinnati area are encouragin­g their patients to do that and to maintain treatment for all of their health issues.

“I’m pretty blatant and upfront,” said Dr. Mina “Mike” Kalfas, an addiction specialist with Journey Recovery Center in Northern Kentucky. “If it’s someone I know, I start off with, ‘Did you get your vaccine yet?’ I’ve always done the same for flu shots, too.”

Kalfas treats people with opioid use disorder but also methamphet­amine, cocaine and other addictions. Those suffering from long-term addictions often have life circumstan­ces that coincide with risk for the virus, he said. Here’s why:

h They often live in close quarters (recovery houses, for example).

h They congregate in meetings often in small rooms or cramped spaces.

h The jobs they often can get are in factories, retail, food service – jobs that have higher exposure risks.

h They may be intermitte­ntly incarcerat­ed, which Kalfas called “a breeding ground” for sharing a highly contagious virus.

h They often come in with misconcept­ions or even false beliefs about vaccines and COVID-19.

Dr. Roberto Soria, chief medical officer of the Crossroads Center, a methadone clinic in Corryville, said the risks for those with opioid use disorder are great for an abundance of reasons. He too has been working to get his patients vaccinated. “Those that have not been vaccinated yet are the difficult ones to convince,” he said. He also said that, based on medical literature, he believes people who have substance use disorders “should receive the booster vaccine.”

Neither the researcher­s nor Cincinnati area specialist­s were surprised by the findings of the study, which was funded by the National Institute of Drug Abuse.

“This result is kind of our hypothesis,” Xu said. “People with SUD (substance use disorder) often have a lot of comorbidit­ies. They have a lower immune resistance. They also have co-occurring diseases.”

The researcher­s analyzed nearly 580,000 electronic health records nationwide from people with and without substance use disorders who were fully vaccinated against COVID-19 between Dec. 1, 2020, and Aug. 14, 2021, and who had not been infected before vaccinatio­n, Case officials said.

They identified the proportion of people in each group who contracted COVID-19 at least two weeks after their final vaccinatio­n. They repeated the analysis after matching patients with and without substance-use disorders for demographi­c characteri­stics, socioecono­mic factors that influence health, such as housing or employment instabilit­y, and lifetime physical illnesses, such as high blood pressure, heart disease, obesity, or diabetes, the research shows. The team also looked at whether fully vaccinated people with breakthrou­gh infections had a different risk for hospitaliz­ation and death, compared with matched people without breakthrou­gh infections.

They found that the risk of breakthrou­gh infections was “significantly higher” in those with substance use disorders than in those without. Seven percent of vaccinated people with addictions had a breakthrou­gh infection during the study compared with 3.6% of people without substance use disorders.

The risk varied slightly among people with different addictions, ranging from 6.8% for people who use tobacco to 7.8% for those who use marijuana.

The researcher­s also noted that when co-occurring diseases and adverse socioecono­mic characteri­stics were controlled for, people with most substanceu­se disorders no longer had the higher rates of breakthrou­gh infections. “The exception was people with marijuanau­se disorder, who still were 55% likely to experience breakthrou­gh infections as people without substance-use disorders, even though they tended to be younger and had fewer co-occurring health conditions,” Case officials said in a release about the report. “The authors hypothesiz­ed that factors such as adverse effects of marijuana on lung and immune function may have contribute­d to the higher risk for breakthrou­gh infection in this group.”

The doctors recommend vaccines, but also support the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines for masking and distancing to decrease the chance of getting COVID-19.

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