Approaches and reporting of alcohol and other drug testing for injured patients in hospital‐based studies: A systematic review

Author:

Lau Georgina1ORCID,Ang Jia Y.1ORCID,Kim Nayoung1,Gabbe Belinda J.12ORCID,Mitra Biswadev13ORCID,Dietze Paul M.145ORCID,Reeder Sandra16ORCID,Beck Ben1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine Monash University Melbourne Australia

2. Health Data Research UK, Swansea University Medical School Swansea University Swansea UK

3. Emergency and Trauma Centre The Alfred Hospital Melbourne Australia

4. Disease Elimination Program Burnet Institute Melbourne Australia

5. National Drug Research Institute Curtin University Perth Australia

6. Central Clinical School Monash University Melbourne Australia

Abstract

AbstractIssueHospital alcohol and/or other drug (AOD) testing is important for identifying AOD‐related injuries; however, testing methods vary. This systematic review aimed to examine biological AOD testing methods from hospital‐based studies of injured patients and quantify what proportion reported key information on those testing methods.ApproachObservational studies published in English from 2010 onwards involving biological AOD testing for injured patients presenting to hospital were included. Studies examining single injury causes were excluded. Extracted data included concentration thresholds for AOD detection (e.g., lower limits of detection, author‐defined cut‐offs), test type (e.g., immunoassay, breathalyser) and approach (e.g., routine, clinical discretion), timing of testing, sample type and the proportion of injured cases tested for AODs.Key FindingsOf 83 included studies, 76 measured alcohol and 37 other drugs. Forty‐nine studies defined blood alcohol concentration thresholds (ranging from 0 to 0.1 g/100 mL). Seven studies defined concentration thresholds for other drugs. Testing approach was reported in 39/76 alcohol and 18/37 other drug studies. Sample type was commonly reported (alcohol: n = 69/76; other drugs: n = 28/37); alcohol was typically measured using blood (n = 60) and other drugs using urine (n = 20). Studies that reported the proportion of cases tested (alcohol: n = 53/76; other drugs: n = 28/37), reported that between 0% and 89% of cases were not tested for alcohol and 0% and 91% for other drugs. Timing of testing was often unreported (alcohol: n = 61; other drugs: n = 30).Implications and ConclusionVariation in AOD testing methods alongside incomplete reporting of those methods limits data comparability and interpretation. Standardised reporting of testing methods will assist AOD‐related injury surveillance and prevention.

Funder

Westpac Scholars Trust

National Health and Medical Research Council

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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