STUDY OBJECTIVE: To determine the safety and efficacy of a 48-hour IV N-acetylcysteine (IV NAC) treatment protocol for acute acetaminophen overdose. DESIGN: Nonrandomized trial open to all eligible patients. SETTING: Multicenter; hospitals included moderate- and high-volume private, university, and municipal hospitals in urban and suburban settings. TYPE OF PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred twenty-three patients were entered. Of these, 179 met inclusion criteria: acute acetaminophen overdose, plasma acetaminophen concentration above the treatment nomogram line, treatment with IV NAC according to the protocol, and sufficient data to determine outcome. INTERVENTIONS: IV NAC treatment consisted of a loading dose of 140 mg/kg followed by 12 doses of 70 mg/kg every four hours. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Patients were grouped for analysis according to risk group based on the initial plasma acetaminophen concentration. Hepatotoxicity (aspartate aminotransferase or alanine aminotransferase of more than 1,000 IU/L) developed in 10% (five of 50) of patients at "probable risk" when IV NAC was started within ten hours of acetaminophen ingestion and in 27.1% (23 of 85) when therapy was begun after ten to 24 hours. Among "high-risk" patients first treated 16 to 24 hours after overdose, hepatotoxicity occurred in 57.9% (11 of 19). There were two deaths (two of 179, 1.1%). Adverse reactions resulting from NAC occurred in 32 of 223 cases (14.3%), consisting in 29 of 32 patients (91% of reactions) of transient, patchy, skin erythema or mild urticaria during the loading dose that did not require discontinuation of therapy. CONCLUSION: This 48-hour IV NAC protocol is safe and effective antidotal therapy for acetaminophen overdose. Based on available data, it is equal to 72-hour oral and 20-hour IV treatment protocols when started early and superior to the 20-hour IV regimen when treatment is delayed. Further study will be required to determine its relative efficacy in the high-risk patient treated very late.
STUDY OBJECTIVE: To determine the safety and efficacy of a 48-hour IV N-acetylcysteine (IV NAC) treatment protocol for acute acetaminophenoverdose. DESIGN: Nonrandomized trial open to all eligible patients. SETTING: Multicenter; hospitals included moderate- and high-volume private, university, and municipal hospitals in urban and suburban settings. TYPE OF PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred twenty-three patients were entered. Of these, 179 met inclusion criteria: acute acetaminophenoverdose, plasma acetaminophen concentration above the treatment nomogram line, treatment with IV NAC according to the protocol, and sufficient data to determine outcome. INTERVENTIONS: IV NAC treatment consisted of a loading dose of 140 mg/kg followed by 12 doses of 70 mg/kg every four hours. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:Patients were grouped for analysis according to risk group based on the initial plasma acetaminophen concentration. Hepatotoxicity (aspartate aminotransferase or alanine aminotransferase of more than 1,000 IU/L) developed in 10% (five of 50) of patients at "probable risk" when IV NAC was started within ten hours of acetaminophen ingestion and in 27.1% (23 of 85) when therapy was begun after ten to 24 hours. Among "high-risk" patients first treated 16 to 24 hours after overdose, hepatotoxicity occurred in 57.9% (11 of 19). There were two deaths (two of 179, 1.1%). Adverse reactions resulting from NAC occurred in 32 of 223 cases (14.3%), consisting in 29 of 32 patients (91% of reactions) of transient, patchy, skin erythema or mild urticaria during the loading dose that did not require discontinuation of therapy. CONCLUSION: This 48-hour IV NAC protocol is safe and effective antidotal therapy for acetaminophenoverdose. Based on available data, it is equal to 72-hour oral and 20-hour IV treatment protocols when started early and superior to the 20-hour IV regimen when treatment is delayed. Further study will be required to determine its relative efficacy in the high-risk patient treated very late.
Authors: Salvatore Grisanti; Deborah Cosentini; Valeria Tovazzi; Susanna Bianchi; Barbara Lazzari; Francesca Consoli; Elisa Roca; Alfredo Berruti; Vittorio D Ferrari Journal: Support Care Cancer Date: 2018-03-15 Impact factor: 3.603