| Literature DB >> 28097095 |
Sammy Saab1, Peter G Konyn2, Matthew R Viramontes2, Melissa A Jimenez2, Jonathan F Grotts3, Wally Hamidzadah2, Veronica P Dang2, Negin L Esmailzadeh2, Gina Choi1, Francisco A Durazo1, Mohamed M El-Kabany1, Steven-Huy B Han1, Myron J Tong4.
Abstract
Background and Aims: Unintentional acetaminophen overdose remains the leading cause of acute liver failure in the United States. Patients with underlying liver disease are at higher risk of poor outcomes from acetaminophen overdose. Limited knowledge of acetaminophen may be a preventable contributor to elevated rates of overdose and thus acute liver failure. The purpose of this study is to assess knowledge of acetaminophen dosing and presence of acetaminophen in common combination products in patients with liver disease.Entities:
Keywords: Acetaminophen; Cirrhosis; Pain management
Year: 2016 PMID: 28097095 PMCID: PMC5225146 DOI: 10.14218/JCTH.2016.00049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Hepatol ISSN: 2225-0719
Demographic characteristics of 401 patients with liver disease
| Characteristic | Number of Responses |
| Gender identity | |
| Female | 187 (46.6%) |
| Male | 214 (53.4%) |
| Ethnicity | |
| Non-Hispanic White | 159 (39.7%) |
| Hispanic White | 123 (30.7%) |
| African American | 26 (6.5%) |
| Asian | 64 (16%) |
| Other | 39 (9.7%) |
| Education | |
| High school or less | 135 (33.7%) |
| Some college or more | 266 (66.3%) |
| Estimated Annual Income | |
| <$50,000 | 167 (41.6%) |
| $50,000–100,000 | 120 (29.9%) |
| >$100,000 | 64 (16%) |
| N/A | 50 (12.5%) |
| Employment Status | |
| Yes | 258 (64.3%) |
| No | 143 (35.7%) |
| If Employed, Hours Worked per Week | |
| 1–20 | 23 (16.2%) |
| 21–40 | 46 (32.4%) |
| >40 | 71 (50%) |
| N/A | 2 (1.4%) |
| Insurance type | |
| PPO | 165 (41.1%) |
| Free for Service Medical/MediCal HMO | 50 (12.5%) |
| GHPP/Non-Medical HMO | 23 (6.7%) |
| No Insurance/Self-pay | 4 (1%) |
| Medicare | 156 (38.9%) |
| Other | 10 (2.5%) |
| Etiology of Disease | |
| Hepatitis B | 96 (23.9%) |
| Autoimmune Hepatitis | 25 (6.2%) |
| Hepatocellular Cancer | 35 (8.7%) |
| Hepatitis C | 171 (42.6%) |
| Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease | 63 (15.7%) |
| Acetaminophen Hepatotoxicity | 0 (0%) |
| Other | 61 (15.2%) |
| Presence of Cirrhosis | |
| Yes | 255 (63.6%) |
| No | 146 (36.4%) |
| Does the Patient Have a Caregiver? | |
| Yes | 170 (42.4%) |
| No | 231 (57.6%) |
| Visit Type | |
| New | 73 (18.2%) |
| Follow-up | 328 (81.8%) |
Abbreviations: N/A, Not answered; PPO, Preferred provider organization; HMO, Health maintenance organization; GHPP, Genetically handicapped persons program.
Patient preferences for education on medicine
| Number of Responses | ||||
| Question | All Participants (n = 401) | Non-Hispanics (n = 278) | Hispanics (n = 123) | p-value |
| Pharmacist | 146 (36.4%) | 93 (33.5%) | 53 (43.1%) | 0.072 |
| Physician | 243 (60.5%) | 180 (64.7%) | 63 (51.2%) | 0.015 |
| Friends/family | 73 (18.2%) | 51 (18.3%) | 22 (17.9%) | 1 |
| Other medical personnel | 20 (4%) | 14 (5%) | 6 (4.9%) | 1 |
| Rarely or never talk with above people before choosing an over the counter medicine | 46 (11.5%) | 35 (12.6%) | 11 (8.9%) | 0.314 |
| No response | 6 (1.5%) | 5 (1.8%) | 1 (0.8%) | 0.671 |
| Physician | 351 (87.6%) | 255 (91.7%) | 96 (78%) | <0.001 |
| Pharmacist | 157 (39.2%) | 117 (42.1%) | 40 (32.5%) | 0.076 |
| Nurse | 91 (22.7%) | 73 (26.3%) | 18 (14.6%) | 0.01 |
| Other medical personnel | 44 (11%) | 22 (7.9%) | 22 (7.9%) | 0.197 |
| Advertising | 3 (7.5%) | 2 (0.7%) | 1 (0.8%) | 1 |
| Friends/family | 51 (12.8%) | 37 (13.3%) | 14 (11.4%) | 0.63 |
| No response | 10 (2.5%) | 4 (1.4%) | 6 (4.9%) | 0.075 |
Fig. 1.Patients knowledge of maximum safe dose of Tylenol® for patients without liver cirrhosis.
Fig. 2.Patients knowledge of maximum safe dose of Tylenol® for patients with liver cirrhosis.
Independent predictors of correctly identifying acetaminophen for different prescription pain medications
| Independent Predictor | Odds Ratio | 95% Confidence Interval | p-value |
| Rarely or never talking with someone before choosing an over-the-counter medication | 2.757 | 1.364 to 5.574 | 0.006 |
| Taking pain medication within the past 6 months | 3.968 | 1.994 to 7.895 | <0.001 |
| Age ≥ 60 | 0.455 | 0.26 to 0.797 | 0.005 |
| Male gender | 0.565 | 0.318 to 1.005 | 0.049 |
| Taking pain medication within the past 6 months | 4.409 | 2.177 to 8.93 | <0.001 |
| Age ≥ 60 | 0.427 | 0.243 to 0.751 | 0.003 |
| Trusting physicians as a source of information on health and medicine use | 3.135 | 0.898 to 10.943 | 0.043 |
| Taking pain medication within the past 6 months | 4.147 | 2.059 to 8.353 | <0.001 |
| Age ≥ 60 | 0.441 | 0.25 to 0.781 | 0.004 |
| Male gender | 0.558 | 0.313 to 0.995 | 0.045 |
| Taking pain medication within the past 6 months | 4.446 | 2.187 to 9.037 | <0.001 |
Patient and provider ability to correctly identify safe daily dose of acetaminophen
| Population | Cohort | Total number of patients | Percentage identifying correct safe daily dose | First AuthorRef |
| Internal medicine family medicine (Alabama, USA) | 76 | 76% | Hornsby | |
| Adult general medicine clinic (Michigan, USA) | 104 | 2.0% | Stumpf | |
| Emergency department (Utah, USA) | 1009 | 7% | Fosnocht | |
| Family medicine practice (Illinois, USA) | 102 | 22.5% | Herndon | |
| Emergency department (France) | 500 | 30% | Boudjemai | |
| Outpatient facilities (Alabama, USA) | 284 | 33% | Hornsby | |
| Emergency department (London, UK) | 910 | 53.8% | Wood | |
| Emergency department (New York, USA) | 103 | 54% | Chen | |
| Hepatology clinic (California, USA) | 401 | 9.7% | Our Study | |