Abstract

Introduction There is controversy that the triple bag intravenous (IV) N-acetylcysteine (NAC) regimen may be underdosing the sickest patients in its current, common usage. We hypothesize that a higher dose IV NAC regimen improves some outcomes. Methods We conducted a poison center based retrospective observational study from January 1, 2016 to December 31, 2017 comparing a single bag higher dose IV NAC regimen (150 mg/kg over 1 h, 15 mg/kg/hour) to the triple bag IV NAC regimen (150 mg/kg over 1 h, 12.5 mg/kg/hour for 4 h, 6.25 mg/kg/hour). In a high-risk population of patients with acetaminophen ingestion (defined as multiplication product ≥ 10,000 mg/L IU/L, not acute ingestions receiving NAC within 8 h, and not hepatotoxic on first contact), we evaluated the rate of hepatotoxicity, peak transaminase, and rate of laboratory coagulopathy. Results 89 patients met the inclusion criteria. 12 of the 23 patients (52%) who received triple bag NAC became hepatotoxic and 10 (43%) became coagulopathic, while only 19 of 66 patients (29%) who received single bag NAC became hepatotoxic and 15 (23%) became coagulopathic; p = .043 and .057, resp. Mean peak transaminase was 4481 IU/L vs 2143 IU/L in those receiving triple bag NAC vs single bag NAC, difference of means 2338 IU/L; p = .026. Conclusion In this exploratory study of a high-risk population of patients with acetaminophen ingestions, the single bag IV NAC regimen was associated with lower peak transaminase and fewer patients becoming hepatotoxic as compared to the triple bag IV NAC regimen.

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