POTD: Droperidol

CODE WHITE AMBULANCE TRIAGE. The patient is at imminent risk of harming themselves and your staff. Verbal deescalation was attempted but has failed. Everyone is looking to you for your OK for chemical sedation. You dig your heels in and are about to mutter the first thing that comes to mind: "5 of haldol and 2 of ativan."

But hold up. Because this POTD is about droperidol.

Background: Droperidol is a dopamine antagonist, and is a first generation antipsychotic. It used to be a favorite of ED doctors to treat agitation in the ED and was used for more than 30 years for acute agitation. It was removed from market 20 years ago because of a black box warning due to QTC prolongation and risk of torsades/sudden cardiac death. This was based off a study looking at 273 case reports over a 4 year period. In the deaths reported, the doses used were 25mg-250mg per dose, doses MUCH higher than what we would typically give in the ED for agitation. Adverse cardiac events or death occurred in 10 patients who received a dose less than 2.5mg. From this study, the FDA placed a black box warning on droperidol. Upon further review of these cases by multiple authors, all of these cases had confounding factors that could have accounted for the adverse event. Overwhelming evidence after the FDA black box warning was issued has showed that droperidol is both safe and effective, especially when used at typical dosing for agitation.

Why Droperidol: Comparatively to other sedatives, namely haloperidol, droperidol is more potent, is faster onset, and has a shorter duration. According to Cressman et. al who examined absorption, metabolism, and excretion of droperidol, absorption via IM is near equivalent to IV administration. Onset of action is 3-10 minutes, and peaks at 30 minutes. Duration of effect is 2-4 hours, and effects may last up to 12 hours. Undergoes hepatic metabolism.

In the DORM study, 10mg droperidol IM was compared to 10mg IM Midazolam. Droperidol, compared to Midazolam, reduced the duration of violent behavior (20 min vs 24 min), required less additional sedation (33% vs 62%), and has less respiratory distress among intoxicated agitated patients.

If single agent droperidol is not enough, it was found in a study authored by Taylor et al that combination 5+5 droperidol and midazolam was more effective at sedation than droperidol or olanzapine alone.

Uses: Typical dosing ranges between 5mg -10mg for agitation, and can be administered IM or IV.

In addition, it can be used to treat headaches, vertigo, nausea, and pain, usually at half the agitation dose.

Side effects: Sedation, extrapyramidal effects, hypotension, prolongation of QT interval. Obtain an EKG if possible before administration, but if not possible, can be obtained after if the patient is agitated. Be mindful of using droperidol in the setting of patients with known prolonged QT interval and patients at risk given their medication history (e.g. methadone).

Sources:

https://vimeo.com/180991859

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/4707581/

http://www.emdocs.net/droperidol-use-in-the-emergency-department-whats-old-is-new-again/

http://www.emdocs.net/the-art-of-the-ed-takedown/

https://www.tamingthesru.com/blog/2019/4/20/the-return-of-droperidol

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12707137/

https://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/dailymed/fda/fdaDrugXsl.cfm?setid=147e033d-d997-4ef6-8bb5-a9ba372590b2&type=display

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Prescription Drug Prices

Prescription drug prices are highly variable and out of control in the United States. Often times, we will find ourselves telling a patient they should see their PMD and take all their medications, or we’ll be prescribing a medication for a newly diagnosed chronic condition. Whether or not our patients follow our advice is dependent on dozens of socioeconomic factors, but one of those is the price of prescription medications.

 

I was curious about the prices our patients face for some of the common medications we often send them home with or expect them sometimes for the rest of their lives. Of course, insurance is a whole other issue, but these are just some of the upfront costs that particularly our most vulnerable and socioeconomically destitute patients may face:

 

*prices listed are the lowest price at a pharmacy within 5 miles of the hospital

Albuterol HFA inhaler, $22.14

Amlodipine 5mg, 30 tabs, $5.20

Amoxicillin 400mg/5mL, 100mL bottle, $9.45

Atorvastatin 10, 30 tabs, $6.27

Azithromycin 250, Z pack with 6 tablets, $9.49

Cephalexin 500mg, 30 tabs, $10.86

Ciprofloxacin 500mg, 20 tabs, $17.42

Clopidogrel 75mg, 30 tabs, $6.60

Doxycycline 100mg, 30 tabs, $19.46

Divalproex 500mg, 30 tabs, $14.41

Furosemide 40mg, 30 tabs, $5.10

Gabapentin 300mg, 30 tabs, $6.07

HCTZ 12.5, 30 tabs, $5.58

Ibuprofen 400mg, 30 tabs, $6.65

Levothyroxine 50mcg, 30 tabs, $10.72

Lisinopril 20mg, 30 tabs, $4.99

Metformin 500mg 30 tabs, $4.99

Nitrofurantoin 100mg, 14 tabs, $18.64

Omeprazole 20mg, 30 tabs, $7.47

Prednisone 10mg, 21 tabs, $14.29

Tamsulosin 0.4mg, 30 tabs, $7.77

 

Drug prices are extremely hard to track down. For instance, the NYS DOH website for searching drug prices hasn’t updated their list of prices for our MMC Pharmacy since 2013.

Our wonderful ED pharmacist Ankit Gohel also pointed out to me that you can look up the average wholesale price of any medication on uptodate in the ‘price’ section.

The Epocrates app will also list average retail prices.

Hope this can be some food for thought.

 

Source: www.communitycaresrx.com

https://apps.health.ny.gov/pdpw/SearchDrugs/Home.action

https://www.goodrx.com/

 

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Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome/Serotonin Syndrome

Let's talk about hyperthemia today, the weird kind. NMS and SS - I often get confused between the two, so this is as much as I can remember:

NMS is SLOW, it happens slowly and takes forever to resolve. Fever + rigidity.

SS is FAST, hyper reflexive and agitated, quick on and relatively quick off. Fever + clonus.

Both have fever/elevated temp. Treat both with benzos. For NMS, add on bromocriptine (SLOW down BRO). For SS, just use the other weird-sounding drug (cyproheptadine).

I think it's also important to learn to recognize potential offending agents when you are doing med recs on patients.

Definitely not a comprehensive list but here are some our patients might be taking (or you are giving them):

NMS

typical antipsychotics > atypicals. Classically, haldol, droperidol, thorazine, pheneragan. Metoclopramide. Less rare but atypicals like clozapine, olanzapine, risperidone, quetiapine, ziprasidone.

SS

sertraline, fluoxetine, citalopram, paroxetine, trazadone, buspirone, venlafaxine, valproate, tramadol, fentanyl, meperidine, ondansetron, metoclopramide, sumatriptan, linezolid, dextromethorphan, MDMA, LSD, St. John’s wort, ginseng.

 

Check this out for more details and some of the more nitty gritty:

http://www.emdocs.net/toxcard-differentiating-serotonin-syndrome-neuroleptic-malignant-syndrome/


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