Management of Acetaminophen Poisoning in the US and Canada

Author:

Dart Richard C.1,Mullins Michael E.2,Matoushek Theresa3,Ruha Anne-Michelle4,Burns Michele M.5,Simone Karen6,Beuhler Michael C.78,Heard Kennon J.1,Mazer-Amirshahi Maryann9,Stork Christine M.10,Varney Shawn M.11,Funk Alexandra R.12,Cantrell Lee F.1314,Cole Jon B.15,Banner William16,Stolbach Andrew I.17,Hendrickson Robert G.18,Lucyk Scott N.19,Sivilotti Marco L. A.20,Su Mark K.21,Nelson Lewis S.22,Rumack Barry H.23

Affiliation:

1. Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Safety, Denver Health and Hospital Authority, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver

2. Department of Emergency Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, Missouri

3. Missouri Poison Center, St Louis

4. Banner University Medical Center Phoenix, Phoenix Children’s Hospital, University of Arizona College of Medicine, Phoenix

5. Massachusetts/Rhode Island Poison Center, Boston Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

6. Northern New England Poison Center, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts

7. Northern Carolina Poison Control, Atrium Health, Charlotte

8. Department of Emergency Medicine, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Salem, North Carolina

9. MedStar Washington Hospital Center, National Capital Poison Center, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, DC

10. Upstate New York Poison Center, Upstate Medical University, Syracuse

11. South Texas Poison Center, University of Texas Health, San Antonio

12. Florida Poison Information Center, Tampa

13. Department of Clinical Pharmacy, University of California San Francisco School of Pharmacy, San Francisco

14. California Poison Control System, San Diego Division, University of California San Diego Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, San Diego

15. Minnesota Poison Control System, Hennepin Healthcare, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis

16. Oklahoma Poison Center, Oklahoma City

17. Maryland Poison Center, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore

18. Oregon Poison Center, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland

19. Poison and Drug Information Service, University of Calgary Department of Emergency Medicine, Calgary, Alberta, Canada

20. Ontario Poison Centre, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada

21. New York City Poison Control Center, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York

22. Department of Emergency Medicine, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Newark

23. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora

Abstract

ImportanceThe US and Canada currently have no formal published nationwide guidelines for specialists in poison information or emergency departments for the management of acetaminophen poisoning, resulting in significant variability in management.ObjectiveTo develop consensus guidelines for the management of acetaminophen poisoning in the US and Canada.Evidence ReviewFour clinical toxicology societies (America’s Poison Centers, American Academy of Clinical Toxicology, American College of Medical Toxicology, and Canadian Association of Poison Control Centers) selected participants (n = 21). Led by a nonvoting chairperson using a modified Delphi method, the panel created a decision framework and determined the appropriate clinical management of a patient with acetaminophen poisoning. Unique to this effort was the collection of guidelines from most poison centers in addition to systematic collection and review of the medical literature. Comments from review by external organizations were incorporated before the guideline was finalized. The project began in March 2021 and ended in March 2023.FindingsThe search retrieved 84 guidelines and 278 publications. The panel developed guidelines for emergency department management of single or repeated ingestion of acetaminophen. In addition, the panel addressed extended-release formulation, high-risk ingestion, coingestion of anticholinergics or opioids, age younger than 6 years, pregnancy, weight greater than 100 kg, and intravenous acetaminophen use. Differences from current US practice include defining acute ingestion as an ingestion presentation from 4 to 24 hours after overdose was initiated. A revised form of the Rumack-Matthew nomogram was developed. The term massive ingestion was replaced with the term high-risk ingestion and denoted by a specific nomogram line. Other recommendations include specific criteria for emergency department triage, laboratory evaluation and monitoring parameters, defining the role of gastrointestinal decontamination, detailed management of acetylcysteine treatment, associated adverse effects, and stopping criteria for acetylcysteine treatment, as well as criteria for consultation with a clinical toxicologist. Finally, specific treatment considerations, including acetylcysteine dosing, fomepizole administration, and considerations for extracorporeal elimination and transplant evaluation, were addressed.Conclusions and RelevanceThis qualitative study provides a consensus statement on consistent evidence-based recommendations for medical, pharmacy, and nursing education and practice to optimize care of patients with acetaminophen poisoning.

Publisher

American Medical Association (AMA)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference20 articles.

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