Heather Alban, Natasha Ireifej, John D'Alessandro, Garrett Jordan, Ryan Lee, Nicholas Patricia, Jill Stoltzfus, Auguste Niyibizi
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: Opioid medications remain a common treatment for acute pain in hospitalized patients. This study aims to identify factors contributing to opioid overdose in the inpatient population, addressing the gap in data on which patients are at higher risk for opioid-related adverse events in the hospital setting.
Methods: A retrospective chart review of inpatients receiving at least one opioid medication was performed at a large academic medical center from January 1, 2022, through December 31, 2022. Patients who received naloxone were designated as the overdose group, while those who received opioids without naloxone served as the control group. Suspected risk factors were included in a multivariable direct logistic regression model to identify patients at higher risk for opioid-related adverse events.
Results: The review included 11,050 admitted patients who received an inpatient opioid, of whom 130 received naloxone. Analysis revealed that patients with creatinine clearance (CrCl) < 60 mL/min, co-administered benzodiazepine, body mass index (BMI) > 30 kg/m2, underlying pulmonary disease, obstructive sleep apnea, chronic opioid use, and/or substance use disorder were at higher risk for requiring naloxone. These factors significantly influenced the likelihood and magnitude of in-hospital opioid overdose.
Conclusion: These validated risk factors should be considered when administering opioid analgesics in the inpatient setting. Consideration should be given to reducing the dose and/or frequency of opioids in addition to the use of alternative analgesic modalities for patients with these risk factors to mitigate the risk of opioid-related adverse events. Incorporating these considerations into clinical practice can enhance patient safety and outcomes.
期刊介绍:
The European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology publishes original papers on all aspects of clinical pharmacology and drug therapy in humans. Manuscripts are welcomed on the following topics: therapeutic trials, pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics, pharmacogenetics, drug metabolism, adverse drug reactions, drug interactions, all aspects of drug development, development relating to teaching in clinical pharmacology, pharmacoepidemiology, and matters relating to the rational prescribing and safe use of drugs. Methodological contributions relevant to these topics are also welcomed.
Data from animal experiments are accepted only in the context of original data in man reported in the same paper. EJCP will only consider manuscripts describing the frequency of allelic variants in different populations if this information is linked to functional data or new interesting variants. Highly relevant differences in frequency with a major impact in drug therapy for the respective population may be submitted as a letter to the editor.
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-a compound that is interesting and new in some basic or fundamental way, or
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-a highly unexpected outcome, or
-conclusions that are scientifically novel in some basic or fundamental sense.