Journal of International Medical Research (Jul 2024)
Patterns of acetaminophen toxicity among patients with low-risk serum concentrations
Abstract
Objective In 2012, the Commission on Human Medicines mandated lowering the acetaminophen toxicity nomogram treatment threshold in the UK to 100 µg/ml at 4 h post-ingestion. The present study aim was to evaluate biochemical and liver toxicity patterns in patients who presented with acetaminophen overdose and had low serum acetaminophen concentrations (150 µg/ml or an unknown ingestion time were excluded. Data were extracted from electronic medical records and are presented as mean ± SD or median (interquartile range). Results A total of 103 patients were included (median age, 17 [4–21] years) and 80 (78%) were female. The median ingested acetaminophen dose was 5000 (2850–7650) mg. At baseline, the median serum acetaminophen concentration was 42 (4.5–64.8) µg/ml, and median alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase levels were 22 (17–28) and 27 (16–45) IU/L, respectively. Twenty patients were treated with acetylcysteine, with none developing adverse reactions. No patient developed hepatotoxicity, including patients with initial multiple product ingestion or other risk factors. Conclusions Patients presenting with an acute acetaminophen overdose with acetaminophen level <150 µg/ml, including patients with other risk factors, are at low risk of hepatotoxicity.