
%0 Journal Article
%T Racial Susceptibility for QT Prolongation in Acute Drug Overdoses
%J Journal of electrocardiology
%D 2014
%A Manini, Alex F.
%A Stimmel, Barry
%A Vlahov, David
%V 47
%N 2
%P 244-250
%X BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: QT prolongation independently predicts adverse cardiovascular events in suspected poisoning. We aimed to evaluate the association between race and drug-induced QT prolongation for patients with acute overdose. METHODS: This was a cross-sectional observational study at two urban teaching hospitals. Consecutive adult ED patients with acute drug overdose were prospectively enrolled over a two year period. The primary outcome, long-QT, was defined using standard criteria: QTc>470ms in females and>460ms in males. The association between race and drug-induced QT prolongation was tested, considering several confounding variables. RESULTS: In 472 patients analyzed (46% female, mean age 42.3), QT prolongation occurred in 12.7%. Blacks had two-fold increased odds of drug-induced QT prolongation (OR 2.01, CI 1.03-3.91) and Hispanics had 48% decreased odds of drug-induced QT prolongation (OR 0.52, CI 0.29-0.94). CONCLUSIONS: We found significant racial susceptibility to drug-induced QT prolongation in this large urban study of acute overdoses.<p /><p>Language: en</p>
%G en
%I Elsevier Publishing
%@ 0022-0736
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jelectrocard.2013.12.002