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Journal Article

Citation

Minghetti S, Vannini M, Casula L, Asprea M, Gori S, Calvani AM, Pisano T. Pediatr. Emerg. Care 2022; 38(11): e1660-e1663.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1097/PEC.0000000000002693

PMID

35686968

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The study used an epidemiological and pharmacological description of child and adolescent psychiatric emergencies (CAPEs), during which psychotropic medications are frequently administered as off-label therapies.

METHODS: We retrospectively describe CAPE in 190 patients (mean age, 14.7 years) referring in the emergency department of a single tertiary center, from June 2016 to June 2018, focusing on off-label administration rate, most of all in emergency setting.

RESULTS: An intrinsic fragility was observed in this population, where 28.4% of patients present a history of self-harm, 24.7% a concomitant neurodevelopmental disorder, and 17.3% a history of substance abuse. Psychomotor agitation was the most frequent referral reason, and it represents an unspecified clinical presentation of several conditions, while self-harm showed a stronger association with depressive disorders (55.2%).Globally, 811 medications were administered both as baseline therapy (67.8% of off-label rate) and/or in the emergency setting, where the off-label rate raised to 78.3%. Benzodiazepines had the highest rate of off-label use (98.2% as baseline therapy, 92.9% in acute context). Nevertheless, in 83.5% cases of acute administrations, a singular oral benzodiazepine (mostly lorazepam) guaranteed psychomotor agitation resolution, with a lower rate of adverse effects in contrast with atypical antipsychotics.

CONCLUSIONS: Off-label drug use in CAPEs is a recurrent clinical practice. An international agreement about off-label drugs is crucial to obtain standard long-term pharmacoepidemiological, safety, and efficacy data. Pharmacological pediatric trials and international guidelines are also required to regulate pharmacological treatments of CAPEs, most of all in emergency settings.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Adolescent; Retrospective Studies; Emergencies; *Antipsychotic Agents/therapeutic use; Benzodiazepines/therapeutic use; *Off-Label Use; Psychomotor Agitation/drug therapy/epidemiology

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