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[JAMA Intern Med发表论文]:无家可归与猝死的发生率及病因
2023年12月29日 时讯速递, 进展交流 [JAMA Intern Med发表论文]:无家可归与猝死的发生率及病因已关闭评论

Original Investigation 

October 23, 2023

Homelessness and Incidence and Causes of Sudden Death: Data From the POST SCD Study

Leila Haghighat, Satvik Ramakrishna, James W. Salazar, et al

JAMA Intern Med. 2023;183(12):1306-1314. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2023.5475

Key Points

Question  How is housing status associated with rates and causes of sudden death by autopsy in San Francisco County?

Findings  In this 8-year cohort study of 868 adult sudden deaths presumed cardiac by World Health Organization criteria (including 151 unhoused individuals [17%]), the sudden mortality rate was 16-fold higher in unhoused vs housed individuals. Noncardiac causes including occult overdose were more common, yet after excluding noncardiac causes, the arrhythmic death rate remained over 7-fold higher in the unhoused population.

Meaning  Homelessness is associated with significantly greater risk of sudden death from both noncardiac causes and arrhythmic causes potentially preventable with a defibrillator.

Abstract

Importance  Over 580 000 people in the US experience homelessness, with one of the largest concentrations residing in San Francisco, California. Unhoused individuals have a life expectancy of approximately 50 years, yet how sudden death contributes to this early mortality is unknown.

Objective  To compare incidence and causes of sudden death by autopsy among housed and unhoused individuals in San Francisco County.

Design, Setting, and Participants  This cohort study used data from the Postmortem Systematic Investigation of Sudden Cardiac Death (POST SCD) study, a prospective cohort of consecutive out-of-hospital cardiac arrest deaths countywide among individuals aged 18 to 90 years. Cases meeting World Health Organization criteria for presumed SCD underwent autopsy, toxicologic analysis, and medical record review. For rate calculations, all 525 incident SCDs in the initial cohort were used (February 1, 2011, to March 1, 2014). For analysis of causes, 343 SCDs (incident cases approximately every third day) were added from the extended cohort (March 1, 2014, to December 16, 2018). Data analysis was performed from July 1, 2022, to July 1, 2023.

Main Outcomes and Measures  The main outcomes were incidence and causes of presumed SCD by housing status. Causes of sudden death were adjudicated as arrhythmic (potentially rescuable with implantable cardioverter-defibrillator), cardiac nonarrhythmic (eg, tamponade), or noncardiac (eg, overdose).

Results  A total of 868 presumed SCDs over 8 years were identified: 151 unhoused individuals (17.4%) and 717 housed individuals (82.6%). Unhoused individuals compared with housed individuals were younger (mean [SD] age, 56.7 [0.8] vs 61.0 [0.5] years, respectively) and more often male (132 [87.4%] vs 499 [69.6%]), with statistically significant racial differences. Paramedic response times were similar (mean [SD] time to arrival, unhoused individuals: 5.6 [0.4] minutes; housed individuals: 5.6 [0.2] minutes; P = .99), while proportion of witnessed sudden deaths was lower among unhoused individuals compared with housed individuals (27 [18.0%] vs 184 [25.7%], respectively, P = .04). Unhoused individuals had higher rates of sudden death (incidence rate ratio [IRR], 16.2; 95% CI, 5.1-51.2; P < .001) and arrhythmic death (IRR, 7.2; 95% CI, 1.3-40.1; P = .02). These associations remained statistically significant after adjustment for differences in age and sex. Noncardiac causes (96 [63.6%] vs 270 [37.7%], P < .001), including occult overdose (48 [31.8%] vs 90 [12.6%], P < .001), gastrointestinal causes (8 [5.3%] vs 15 [2.1%], P = .03), and infection (11 [7.3%] vs 20 [2.8%], P = .01), were more common among sudden deaths in unhoused individuals. A lower proportion of sudden deaths in unhoused individuals were due to arrhythmic causes (48 of 151 [31.8%] vs 420 of 717 [58.6%], P < .001), including acute and chronic coronary disease.

Conclusions and Relevance  In this cohort study among individuals who experienced sudden death in San Francisco County, homelessness was associated with greater risk of sudden death from both noncardiac causes and arrhythmic causes potentially preventable with a defibrillator.

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