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Epinephrine treatment of food-induced and other cause anaphylaxis in United States and Canadian Emergency Departments: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Journal

EXPERT REVIEW OF CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 9, Pages 1171-1181

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/1744666X.2023.2229517

Keywords

Anaphylaxis; epinephrine; food-induced anaphylaxis; meta-analysis; proportion; systematic review; treatment

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This study investigated whether epinephrine use for food-induced and other cause anaphylaxis in United States and Canadian emergency departments has changed over time. The results showed that there has been an increase in epinephrine treatment for food-induced anaphylaxis, but no clear change for anaphylaxis of any cause. Approximately 45% of emergency department patients with anaphylaxis received epinephrine in the last 10 years. A limitation of the study is the heterogeneity in anaphylaxis definitions.
IntroductionStudies from more than 10 years ago showed epinephrine treatment of food-induced anaphylaxis in the emergency department (ED) was unacceptably low. We investigated whether epinephrine treatment of food-induced and other cause anaphylaxis in United States and Canadian EDs has changed over time.MethodsGuided by a health sciences librarian, we performed a systematic search in Medline, Embase, and Web of Science on 11 January 2023. We included observational studies that reported epinephrine use to treat anaphylaxis in the ED. We stratified by anaphylaxis etiology (food-, venom-, medication-induced, or any cause). Associations between year and epinephrine use were tested using Spearman correlation and proportional meta-analysis.ResultsOf 2458 records identified in our initial search, 40 met inclusion criteria. Of these, 14 examined food-induced, 4 venom-induced, 0 medication-induced, and 24 any cause anaphylaxis. For epinephrine treatment of food-induced anaphylaxis in the ED, among studies using similar definition of anaphylaxis, meta-analysis showed a pooled value of 20.7% (95% CI 17.8, 23.8) for studies performed >10 years ago and 45.1% (95% CI 38.4, 52.0) from those in the last 10 years. For anaphylaxis of any cause, there was no change over time, with a pooled value of 45.0% (95% CI 39.8, 50.3) over the last 10 years.DiscussionEpinephrine treatment of food-induced anaphylaxis in the ED has increased over time. There was no clear change for anaphylaxis of any cause. Over the last 10 years, approximately 45% of ED patients with anaphylaxis received epinephrine. A limitation of the evidence is heterogeneity in anaphylaxis definitions.

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