Fiore L D, Scola M A, Cantillon C E, Brophy M T
Massachusetts Veterans Epidemiology Research and Information Center, VA Boston Healthcare System, 150 South Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02130, USA.
J Thromb Thrombolysis. 2001 Apr;11(2):175-83. doi: 10.1023/a:1011237019082.
Anaphylactoid reactions in patients receiving intravenously administered vitamin K have been reported in the literature. To summarize the known data on anaphylactoid reactions from administration of vitamin K, we reviewed all published and unpublished reports of this adverse reaction. Published reports were obtained through medline (1966--1999) and EMBASE (1971--1999) searches of the English language literature and review of references from identified case reports. Unpublished reports were obtained using the Spontaneous Reporting System Adverse Reaction database of the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) between August 1968 and September 1997. All adverse drug reactions to vitamin K were categorized by route of drug administration, dose and standard adverse reaction code. In the FDA reports, we defined anaphylactoid reactions as any adverse drug reaction coded as either anaphylaxis, allergic reaction, apnea, dyspnea, death, heart arrest, hypotension, shock or vasodilatation. Additionally, all fatal and life-threatening FDA reported reactions were reviewed to determine if they could represent an anaphylactoid reaction missed by the above definition. The literature review uncovered a total of 23 cases (3 fatal) of anaphylactoid reactions from intravenous vitamin K. The FDA database contained a total of 2236 adverse drug reactions reported in 1019 patients receiving vitamin K by all routes of administration. Of the 192 patients with reactions reported for intravenous vitamin K, 132 patients (69 %) had a reaction defined as anaphylactoid, with 24 fatalities (18 %) attributed to the vitamin K reaction. There were 21 patients with anaphylactoid reactions and 4 fatalities reported with doses of intravenous vitamin K of less than 5 mgs. For the 217 patients with reactions reported due to vitamin K via a non-intravenous route of administration, 38 patients had reactions meeting the definition of anaphylactoid (18 %), with 1 fatality (3 %) attributed to the drug. The absolute risk of an anaphylactoid reaction to intravenous vitamin K cannot be determined by this study, but the relatively small number of documented cases despite widespread use of this drug suggest that the reaction is rare. Anaphylactic reactions and case fatality reports were found even when intravenous vitamin K was given at low doses by slow dilute infusion. The pathogenesis of this reaction is unknown and may be multifactorial with etiologies including vasodilation induced by the solubilizing vehicle or immune-mediated processes. We conclude that use of intravenous vitamin K should be limited to patients with serious hemorrhage due to a coagulopathy that is secondary to a relative or absolute deficiency of vitamin K.
文献中已报道了接受静脉注射维生素K的患者发生类过敏反应。为总结维生素K给药后类过敏反应的已知数据,我们查阅了所有已发表和未发表的关于这一不良反应的报告。通过检索Medline(1966 - 1999年)和EMBASE(1971 - 1999年)中的英文文献以及对已识别病例报告的参考文献进行回顾来获取已发表报告。未发表报告则通过美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)1968年8月至1997年9月的自发报告系统不良反应数据库获取。所有维生素K的药物不良反应均按照给药途径、剂量和标准不良反应编码进行分类。在FDA报告中,我们将类过敏反应定义为任何编码为过敏反应、过敏性反应、呼吸暂停、呼吸困难、死亡、心脏骤停、低血压、休克或血管扩张的药物不良反应。此外,对FDA报告的所有致命和危及生命的反应进行了审查,以确定它们是否可能代表被上述定义遗漏的类过敏反应。文献综述共发现23例(3例致命)静脉注射维生素K引起的类过敏反应病例。FDA数据库共包含1019例接受各种给药途径维生素K治疗的患者报告的2236例药物不良反应。在报告静脉注射维生素K有反应的192例患者中,132例(69%)的反应被定义为类过敏反应,其中24例死亡(18%)归因于维生素K反应。静脉注射维生素K剂量小于5毫克时,有21例类过敏反应病例报告,4例死亡。在报告因非静脉给药途径使用维生素K有反应的217例患者中,38例(18%)的反应符合类过敏反应的定义,1例死亡(3%)归因于该药物。本研究无法确定静脉注射维生素K发生类过敏反应的绝对风险,但尽管该药物广泛使用,记录在案的病例数量相对较少,表明该反应较为罕见。即使以低剂量缓慢稀释静脉输注维生素K时,也发现了过敏反应和病例死亡报告。该反应的发病机制尚不清楚,可能是多因素的,病因包括增溶剂诱导的血管扩张或免疫介导过程。我们得出结论,静脉注射维生素K应仅限于因维生素K相对或绝对缺乏继发的凝血病导致严重出血的患者。