Acetaminophen and acetaminophen-opioid combination prescribing trends among hospitalized children, adolescents, and young adults with cancer

Cheryl L. Mathis , Huong D. Meeks , Kevin M. Watt , Luke D. Maese , Jonathan E. Constance
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Abstract

Acetaminophen (APAP) is a ubiquitous antipyretic and analgesic used in children in the United States (US), including those with cancer. The effects of US Food & Drug Administration (FDA) guidance on APAP prescribing have been described for healthy adults and children; however, APAP use patterns in neonates, infants, children, adolescents, and young adults (CAYA) with cancer are unknown. Considering their increased risk of liver injury, APAP’s potential for causing hepatoxicity, and FDA guidance changes, this study examined the recent evolution of APAP use in CAYA with cancer. This retrospective, multi-center analysis extracted APAP prescribing data from the Pediatric Health Information System® (PHIS). Eligible patients were aged 0–26 years, had a cancer diagnosis per International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes, and were prescribed a chemotherapeutic. APAP and APAP-opioid combination prescribing were assessed at hospital, regional, and national levels. APAP and APAP-opioid combination use changes were assessed using the non-parametric Mann-Kendall test. PHIS records for the complete years of 2004–2021 yielded 388,364 inpatient encounters for 50,779 unique patients. Of these, 87.3 % of patients received APAP. Although APAP-opioid combination use was infrequent overall, CAYA receiving APAP were more likely to receive APAP-opioid combination medications (N = 25,880, 13.4 %, p < 0.001) compared to those not receiving APAP. Among specialty children’s hospitals, national APAP use was stable over the study period. Regionally, APAP use increased among Northeastern hospitals. APAP-opioid combination use decreased nationally with regional variation. In contrast to the steady decline in other regions, Southern APAP-opioid combination use was consistently elevated before declining in 2014.
住院儿童、青少年和年轻癌症患者对乙酰氨基酚和对乙酰氨基酚-阿片类药物联合处方趋势
对乙酰氨基酚(APAP)是美国儿童(包括癌症患者)普遍使用的解热镇痛药。美国食品的影响美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)对健康成人和儿童的APAP处方指南进行了描述;然而,APAP在患有癌症的新生儿、婴儿、儿童、青少年和青壮年(CAYA)中的使用模式尚不清楚。考虑到其肝损伤风险增加,APAP可能引起肝毒性,以及FDA指南的变化,本研究检查了APAP在CAYA癌症患者中使用的最新进展。这项回顾性的多中心分析从儿童卫生信息系统(PHIS)中提取了APAP处方数据。符合条件的患者年龄在0-26岁之间,根据国际疾病分类(ICD)代码进行了癌症诊断,并开具了化疗处方。在医院、地区和国家层面评估APAP和APAP-阿片类药物联合处方。采用非参数Mann-Kendall检验评估APAP和APAP-阿片类药物联合使用的变化。2004-2021年全年的公共卫生信息系统记录为50,779名特殊患者提供了388,364次住院治疗。其中,87.3 %的患者接受了APAP治疗。虽然APAP-阿片类药物联合使用总体上不常见,但与未接受APAP的患者相比,接受APAP的CAYA更有可能接受APAP-阿片类药物联合治疗(N = 25,880,13.4 %,p <; 0.001)。在专科儿童医院中,全国APAP的使用在研究期间保持稳定。从地区来看,东北地区医院对APAP的使用有所增加。apap -阿片类药物联合使用在全国范围内下降,但存在区域差异。与其他地区的稳步下降相反,南部apap -阿片类药物联合使用在2014年下降之前一直在上升。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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