1. Ketamine restriction correlates with reduced cholestatic liver injury and improved outcomes in critically ill patients with burn injury.
- Author
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De Tymowski, Christian, Dépret, François, Dudoignon, Emmanuel, Moreno, Nabila, Zagdanski, Anne-Marie, Hodjat, Kyann, Deniau, Benjamin, Mebazaa, Alexandre, Legrand, Matthieu, and Mallet, Vincent
- Subjects
Burn injury ,Cholestatic liver injury ,Drug toxicity ,Drug-induced liver injury ,Ketamine ,Mortality - Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Ketamine-associated cholestatic liver injury is reported in patients with severe burn injury, but its association with patient outcome is unclear. We investigated the relationship between ketamine exposure, cholestatic liver injury, and outcome of critically ill patients with burn injury. METHODS: In a retrospective study, patients with severe burn injury were analysed across two periods: unrestricted ketamine prescription (ketamine-liberal) and capped ketamine dosage (ketamine-restricted). The primary endpoint was cholestatic liver injury, and the secondary endpoint was 3-month mortality. Binary logistic regression models and the revised electronic causality assessment method were used to measure the strength of associations and causality assessment, respectively. RESULTS: Of 279 patients (median age 51 [IQR 31-67] years; 63.1% men; burned surface area 28.5%, IQR 20-45%), 155 (56%) were in the ketamine-liberal group, and 124 (44%) were in the ketamine-restricted group, with comparable clinical characteristics, except for ketamine exposure (median doses 265.0 [IQR 0-8,021] mg and 20 [IQR 0-105] mg, respectively; p
- Published
- 2024