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Life-threatening drug-associated hyperkalemia: a retrospective study from laboratory signals.

Pernelle Noize, Haleh Bagheri, Geneviève Durrieu, Françoise Haramburu, Nicholas Moore et al.
Other Pharmacoepidemiology and drug safety 2011 26 인용
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

연구 유형
Other
대상 집단
elderly adults
기간
52.0 weeks
중재
Life-threatening drug-associated hyperkalemia: a retrospective study from laboratory signals. 6.5 mmol/l
대조군
None
일차 결과
None
효과 방향
Mixed
비뚤림 위험
Unclear

Abstract

PURPOSE: Life-threatening hyperkalemia may be induced by drugs and preventable in at-risk patients. This study was designed to describe cases of 'serious' drug-associated hyperkalemia. METHODS: Adult subjects with a serum potassium concentration above 6.5 mmol/L detected at admission or during hospital stay in nephrology, cardiology, geriatric, emergency or intensive care units were identified by biology laboratories of hospitals and clinics located in Midi-Pyrenees (southwest France). Patients dialyzed for end-stage kidney disease were excluded. Data were collected from medical files. Hyperkalemia was defined as drug-associated if at least one drug known to increase serum potassium concentration was taken when hyperkalemia occurred (among drugs taken in outpatient care for hyperkalemia detected at admission and among drugs taken in outpatient care and continued at hospital and drugs introduced from admission for hyperkalemia detected during hospital stay). RESULTS: Of 168 hyperkalemia cases, 102 (60.7%) were classified as drug-associated. They concerned elderly patients (mean age: 76.1 years) often having arterial hypertension and/or cardiac diseases (88.2%). Risk factors, mainly acute kidney failure, were observed in almost all cases (98.0%). Drugs predominantly involved were angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (47.1%), spironolactone (41.2%), angiotensin II receptor antagonists (23.5%) and potassium supplements (23.5%). In 10% of cases, death could be attributed to hyperkalemia. CONCLUSIONS: Laboratory databases allowed an exhaustive identification of hyperkalemia cases. The frequency of drug-related hyperkalemia and their characteristics suggest that treatment with drugs known to increase serum potassium concentration can be inappropriate, especially regarding associations or indications, and is highly risky for predisposed patients.

요약

This study was designed to describe cases of ‘serious’ drug‐associated hyperkalemia, which is induced by drugs and preventable in at‐risk patients.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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