Association of midazolam route of administration and need for recurrent dosing among children with seizures cared for by emergency medical services

Author:

Ramgopal Sriram1ORCID,Owusu‐Ansah Sylvia2,Crowe Remle P.3,Okubo Masashi4,Martin‐Gill Christian4

Affiliation:

1. Division of Emergency Medicine, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Chicago Illinois USA

2. Division of Emergency Medicine UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

3. ESO Austin Texas USA

4. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveNational guidelines in the United States recommend the intramuscular and intranasal routes for midazolam for the management of seizures in the prehospital setting. We evaluated the association of route of midazolam administration with the use of additional benzodiazepine doses for children with seizures cared for by emergency medical services (EMS).MethodsWe conducted a retrospective cohort study from a US multiagency EMS dataset for the years 2018–2022, including children transported to the hospital with a clinician impression of seizures, convulsions, or status epilepticus, and who received an initial correct weight‐based dose of midazolam (.2 mg/kg intramuscular, .1 mg/kg intravenous, .2 mg/kg intranasal). We evaluated the association of route of initial midazolam administration with provision of additional benzodiazepine dose in logistic regression models adjusted for age, vital signs, pulse oximetry, level of consciousness, and time spent with the patient.ResultsWe included 2923 encounters with patients who received an appropriate weight‐based dose of midazolam for seizures (46.3% intramuscular, 21.8% intranasal, 31.9% intravenous). The median time to the first dose of midazolam from EMS arrival was similar between children who received intramuscular (7.3 min, interquartile range [IQR] = 4.6–12.5) and intranasal midazolam (7.8 min, IQR = 4.5–13.4) and longer for intravenous midazolam (13.1 min, IQR = 8.2–19.4). At least one additional dose of midazolam was given to 21.4%. In multivariable models, intranasal midazolam was associated with higher odds (odds ratio [OR] = 1.39, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.10–1.76) and intravenous midazolam was associated with similar odds (OR = 1.00, 95% CI = .80–1.26) of requiring additional doses of benzodiazepines relative to intramuscular midazolam.SignificanceIntranasal midazolam was associated with greater odds of repeated benzodiazepine dosing relative to initial intramuscular administration, but confounding factors could have affected this finding. Further study of the dosing and/or the prioritization of the intranasal route for pediatric seizures by EMS clinicians is warranted.

Funder

Health Resources and Services Administration

Publisher

Wiley

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1. Spotlight on Research;Journal of Paramedic Practice;2024-07-02

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