Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, Section of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, Lebanon, NH, USA.
Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, NH, USA.
Curr Allergy Asthma Rep. 2024 Nov;24(11):623-629. doi: 10.1007/s11882-024-01174-6. Epub 2024 Sep 2.
To discuss if all patients who use self-injectable epinephrine outside the hospital setting require immediate emergency care.
Prior to 2023, anaphylaxis management guidance universally recommended that patients who use self-injectable epinephrine outside of the hospital or clinic setting immediately activate emergency medical services and seek further care. Additional food-induced anaphylaxis management recommendations specified that all patients always carry 2 auto-injector devices and give a second dose of epinephrine if there was not immediate response within 5 min of injection. Patients presenting for emergency care after epinephrine are often observed for up to 4-6 h afterwards, even when completely asymptomatic. These management steps have lacked evidence for improving outcomes, and universal implementation of these approaches is not cost-effective as guidance for food allergic patients. Epinephrine pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics suggest that peak physiologic response is more likely to occur closer to 15 min than before 5 min, that few patients require a second dose of epinephrine as most stabilize within 15 min of use, that 60 min of observation after a patient stabilizes after epinephrine use may be adequate as patients infrequently have further sequelae, and that not everyone needs to carry 2 epinephrine auto-injectors on their person at all times. The most recent anaphylaxis practice parameter promotes a contextualized approach to these management questions, outlining the option for watchful waiting to gauge response to epinephrine before seeking emergency care, which has been proven as a more cost-effective management strategy. The recent updated anaphylaxis care guidelines support the evolution of anaphylaxis care, in that universal, immediate activation of emergency services is not required for using self-injectable epinephrine outside the hospital setting.
探讨在医院环境之外使用自我注射肾上腺素的所有患者是否都需要立即紧急护理。
在 2023 年之前,过敏反应管理指南普遍建议在医院或诊所环境之外使用自我注射肾上腺素的患者立即激活紧急医疗服务并寻求进一步护理。其他食物诱发过敏反应管理建议规定,所有患者始终携带 2 个自动注射器,如果在注射后 5 分钟内没有立即反应,则给予肾上腺素第二剂。在肾上腺素治疗后到急诊就诊的患者通常会观察 4-6 小时,即使他们完全无症状。这些管理步骤缺乏改善结果的证据,并且由于指导食物过敏患者的方法不是普遍有效的,因此普遍实施这些方法在经济上不可行。肾上腺素的药代动力学和药效学表明,峰值生理反应更可能发生在 15 分钟而不是 5 分钟之前,很少有患者需要第二剂肾上腺素,因为大多数患者在使用后 15 分钟内稳定,患者在使用肾上腺素后稳定后观察 60 分钟可能足够,因为患者很少有进一步的后遗症,并非每个人都需要随时随地携带 2 个肾上腺素自动注射器。最近的过敏反应实践参数为这些管理问题提供了一种基于背景的方法,概述了在寻求紧急护理之前观察对肾上腺素的反应的选择,事实证明这是一种更具成本效益的管理策略。最近更新的过敏反应护理指南支持过敏反应护理的发展,即不需要在医院环境之外使用自我注射肾上腺素时普遍立即激活紧急服务。