Cannabis Use and Inhalational Anesthesia Administration in Older Adults: A Propensity-matched Retrospective Cohort Study.

IF 9.1 1区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY Anesthesiology Pub Date : 2024-11-01 DOI:10.1097/ALN.0000000000005146
Ruba Sajdeya, Masoud Rouhizadeh, Robert L Cook, Ronald L Ison, Chen Bai, Sebastian Jugl, Hanzhi Gao, Mamoun T Mardini, Kimia Zandbiglari, Farzana I Adiba, Osama Dasa, Almut G Winterstein, Catherine C Price, Thomas A Pearson, Christoph N Seubert, Patrick J Tighe
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Abstract

Background: Cannabis use is associated with higher intravenous anesthetic administration. Similar data regarding inhalational anesthetics are limited. With rising cannabis use prevalence, understanding any potential relationship with inhalational anesthetic dosing is crucial. Average intraoperative isoflurane or sevoflurane minimum alveolar concentration equivalents between older adults with and without cannabis use were compared.

Methods: The electronic health records of 22,476 surgical patients 65 yr or older at the University of Florida Health System between 2018 and 2020 were reviewed. The primary exposure was cannabis use within 60 days of surgery, determined via (1) a previously published natural language processing algorithm applied to unstructured notes and (2) structured data, including International Classification of Diseases codes for cannabis use disorders and poisoning by cannabis, laboratory cannabinoids screening results, and RxNorm codes. The primary outcome was the intraoperative time-weighted average of isoflurane or sevoflurane minimum alveolar concentration equivalents at 1-min resolution. No a priori minimally clinically important difference was established. Patients demonstrating cannabis use were matched 4:1 to non-cannabis use controls using a propensity score.

Results: Among 5,118 meeting inclusion criteria, 1,340 patients (268 cannabis users and 1,072 nonusers) remained after propensity score matching. The median and interquartile range age was 69 (67 to 73) yr; 872 (65.0%) were male, and 1,143 (85.3%) were non-Hispanic White. The median (interquartile range) anesthesia duration was 175 (118 to 268) min. After matching, all baseline characteristics were well-balanced by exposure. Cannabis users had statistically significantly higher average minimum alveolar concentrations than nonusers (mean ± SD, 0.58 ± 0.23 vs. 0.54 ± 0.22, respectively; mean difference, 0.04; 95% confidence limits, 0.01 to 0.06; P = 0.020).

Conclusion: Cannabis use was associated with administering statistically significantly higher inhalational anesthetic minimum alveolar concentration equivalents in older adults, but the clinical significance of this difference is unclear. These data do not support the hypothesis that cannabis users require clinically meaningfully higher inhalational anesthetics doses.

Editor’s perspective:

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老年人吸食大麻与吸入麻醉的关系:倾向匹配回顾性队列研究》。
背景:使用大麻与较高的静脉注射麻醉剂量有关。有关吸入麻醉剂的类似数据却很有限。随着大麻使用率的上升,了解其与吸入麻醉剂剂量的潜在关系至关重要。我们比较了吸食和不吸食大麻的老年人术中平均异氟醚/七氟醚最小肺泡浓度当量:我们查阅了佛罗里达大学卫生系统 2018-2020 年间 22,476 名年龄≥65 岁的手术患者的电子健康记录。主要暴露是手术后 60 天内的大麻使用情况,通过 i) 以前发表的应用于非结构化笔记的自然语言处理算法和 ii) 结构化数据(包括大麻使用障碍和大麻中毒的国际疾病分类代码、实验室大麻素筛查结果和 RxNorm 代码)确定。主要结果是异氟醚/七氟醚最小肺泡浓度当量在一分钟分辨率下的术中时间加权平均值。没有确定先验最小临床重要性差异。使用倾向评分法将使用大麻的患者与不使用大麻的对照组进行 4:1 匹配:在符合纳入标准的 5118 名患者中,有 1340 名患者(268 名大麻使用者和 1072 名非大麻使用者)在倾向评分匹配后仍然存在。年龄中位数和四分位数间距 (IQR) 为 69 (67, 73) 岁;872 人(65.0%)为男性,1,143 人(85.3%)为非西班牙裔白人。麻醉持续时间的中位数(IQR)为 175 分钟(118-268 分钟)。经过匹配后,所有基线特征都按接触情况得到了很好的平衡。据统计,吸食大麻者的平均最低肺泡浓度明显高于非吸食者[平均值±SD:分别为 0.58±0.23 和 0.54±0.22;平均差=0.04;95% 置信区间:0.01 至 0.06;P=0.020]:结论:吸食大麻与老年人吸入麻醉剂最小肺泡浓度当量在统计学上明显升高有关,但这种差异的临床意义尚不清楚。这些数据并不支持大麻使用者需要临床上有意义的更高吸入麻醉剂剂量的假设。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Anesthesiology
Anesthesiology 医学-麻醉学
CiteScore
10.40
自引率
5.70%
发文量
542
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: With its establishment in 1940, Anesthesiology has emerged as a prominent leader in the field of anesthesiology, encompassing perioperative, critical care, and pain medicine. As the esteemed journal of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, Anesthesiology operates independently with full editorial freedom. Its distinguished Editorial Board, comprising renowned professionals from across the globe, drives the advancement of the specialty by presenting innovative research through immediate open access to select articles and granting free access to all published articles after a six-month period. Furthermore, Anesthesiology actively promotes groundbreaking studies through an influential press release program. The journal's unwavering commitment lies in the dissemination of exemplary work that enhances clinical practice and revolutionizes the practice of medicine within our discipline.
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