Repeated poisonings in Denmark–a nationwide study

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Repeated poisonings in Denmark–a nationwide study. / Jensen, Thomas Leth; Tejlbo Frost, Matilde; Dalhoff, Kim; Studsgaard Petersen, Tonny.

In: Clinical Toxicology, Vol. 61, No. 5, 2023, p. 392-399.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Jensen, TL, Tejlbo Frost, M, Dalhoff, K & Studsgaard Petersen, T 2023, 'Repeated poisonings in Denmark–a nationwide study', Clinical Toxicology, vol. 61, no. 5, pp. 392-399. https://doi.org/10.1080/15563650.2023.2205006

APA

Jensen, T. L., Tejlbo Frost, M., Dalhoff, K., & Studsgaard Petersen, T. (2023). Repeated poisonings in Denmark–a nationwide study. Clinical Toxicology, 61(5), 392-399. https://doi.org/10.1080/15563650.2023.2205006

Vancouver

Jensen TL, Tejlbo Frost M, Dalhoff K, Studsgaard Petersen T. Repeated poisonings in Denmark–a nationwide study. Clinical Toxicology. 2023;61(5):392-399. https://doi.org/10.1080/15563650.2023.2205006

Author

Jensen, Thomas Leth ; Tejlbo Frost, Matilde ; Dalhoff, Kim ; Studsgaard Petersen, Tonny. / Repeated poisonings in Denmark–a nationwide study. In: Clinical Toxicology. 2023 ; Vol. 61, No. 5. pp. 392-399.

Bibtex

@article{8dbcfebd50774fb794714f8931006af5,
title = "Repeated poisonings in Denmark–a nationwide study",
abstract = "Objective: Poisonings contribute significantly to morbidity and mortality of patients. Some patients have numerous contacts to a poison information center, indicating repeated poisoning exposures. Information on the involved substances is necessary to explore methods to prevent self-harm and reduce mortality. The objective of this study was to characterize the patient population with repeated poison exposures in Denmark and identify the substances involved. Methods: This study was a retrospective cohort study of enquiries to the nationwide Danish Poison Information Centre and the Danish National Patient Registry. The databases were used to identify patients with more than five individual poisoning episodes within a 12-month-period between 1 January 2013, and 31 December 2017. Results: One hundred and thirty-seven patients and 995 patients met the inclusion criteria in the Danish Poison Information Centre and the Danish National Patient Registry, respectively. The majority were women (82.5% and 66.3% for the Danish Poison Information Centre and the Danish National Patient Registry cohorts, respectively). The mean age was 24.7 and 29.5 years. Psychiatric comorbidities were frequent with 74.5% and 67.0% suffering from personality disorders and 70.1% and 54.5% from affective disorders in the Danish Poison Information Centre and the Danish National Patient Registry cohorts, respectively. One thousand seven hundred and fifty-two poisoning episodes were identified in the Danish Poison Information Centre database, and the most common types of substance were {\textquoteleft}pharmaceuticals{\textquoteright} (1,420 episodes). The most common medications ingested were quetiapine, paracetamol and cyclizine. Median number of contacts to the Danish Poison Information Centre was 10. Patients with one or more poisoning episodes involving cyclizine had on average 11.4 poisoning episodes involving cyclizine. In the Danish National Patient Registry cohort 80.9% were alive after 10 years compared to 97.7% in the background population. Conclusion and Implications: Most poisonings were intentional and occurred among younger women. Psychiatric comorbidity was frequent. Most often, pharmaceuticals were the toxic substance, mainly quetiapine, paracetamol and cyclizine. Changing the status of cyclizine from over the counter to prescription only medication, and implementing stricter rules for prescribing quetiapine, could limit future poisoning incidences.",
keywords = "comorbidities, cyclizine, Poison Information Centre, prescription medicine, quetiapine, Repeated poisonings",
author = "Jensen, {Thomas Leth} and {Tejlbo Frost}, Matilde and Kim Dalhoff and {Studsgaard Petersen}, Tonny",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1080/15563650.2023.2205006",
language = "English",
volume = "61",
pages = "392--399",
journal = "Clinical Toxicology",
issn = "1556-3650",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Repeated poisonings in Denmark–a nationwide study

AU - Jensen, Thomas Leth

AU - Tejlbo Frost, Matilde

AU - Dalhoff, Kim

AU - Studsgaard Petersen, Tonny

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Objective: Poisonings contribute significantly to morbidity and mortality of patients. Some patients have numerous contacts to a poison information center, indicating repeated poisoning exposures. Information on the involved substances is necessary to explore methods to prevent self-harm and reduce mortality. The objective of this study was to characterize the patient population with repeated poison exposures in Denmark and identify the substances involved. Methods: This study was a retrospective cohort study of enquiries to the nationwide Danish Poison Information Centre and the Danish National Patient Registry. The databases were used to identify patients with more than five individual poisoning episodes within a 12-month-period between 1 January 2013, and 31 December 2017. Results: One hundred and thirty-seven patients and 995 patients met the inclusion criteria in the Danish Poison Information Centre and the Danish National Patient Registry, respectively. The majority were women (82.5% and 66.3% for the Danish Poison Information Centre and the Danish National Patient Registry cohorts, respectively). The mean age was 24.7 and 29.5 years. Psychiatric comorbidities were frequent with 74.5% and 67.0% suffering from personality disorders and 70.1% and 54.5% from affective disorders in the Danish Poison Information Centre and the Danish National Patient Registry cohorts, respectively. One thousand seven hundred and fifty-two poisoning episodes were identified in the Danish Poison Information Centre database, and the most common types of substance were ‘pharmaceuticals’ (1,420 episodes). The most common medications ingested were quetiapine, paracetamol and cyclizine. Median number of contacts to the Danish Poison Information Centre was 10. Patients with one or more poisoning episodes involving cyclizine had on average 11.4 poisoning episodes involving cyclizine. In the Danish National Patient Registry cohort 80.9% were alive after 10 years compared to 97.7% in the background population. Conclusion and Implications: Most poisonings were intentional and occurred among younger women. Psychiatric comorbidity was frequent. Most often, pharmaceuticals were the toxic substance, mainly quetiapine, paracetamol and cyclizine. Changing the status of cyclizine from over the counter to prescription only medication, and implementing stricter rules for prescribing quetiapine, could limit future poisoning incidences.

AB - Objective: Poisonings contribute significantly to morbidity and mortality of patients. Some patients have numerous contacts to a poison information center, indicating repeated poisoning exposures. Information on the involved substances is necessary to explore methods to prevent self-harm and reduce mortality. The objective of this study was to characterize the patient population with repeated poison exposures in Denmark and identify the substances involved. Methods: This study was a retrospective cohort study of enquiries to the nationwide Danish Poison Information Centre and the Danish National Patient Registry. The databases were used to identify patients with more than five individual poisoning episodes within a 12-month-period between 1 January 2013, and 31 December 2017. Results: One hundred and thirty-seven patients and 995 patients met the inclusion criteria in the Danish Poison Information Centre and the Danish National Patient Registry, respectively. The majority were women (82.5% and 66.3% for the Danish Poison Information Centre and the Danish National Patient Registry cohorts, respectively). The mean age was 24.7 and 29.5 years. Psychiatric comorbidities were frequent with 74.5% and 67.0% suffering from personality disorders and 70.1% and 54.5% from affective disorders in the Danish Poison Information Centre and the Danish National Patient Registry cohorts, respectively. One thousand seven hundred and fifty-two poisoning episodes were identified in the Danish Poison Information Centre database, and the most common types of substance were ‘pharmaceuticals’ (1,420 episodes). The most common medications ingested were quetiapine, paracetamol and cyclizine. Median number of contacts to the Danish Poison Information Centre was 10. Patients with one or more poisoning episodes involving cyclizine had on average 11.4 poisoning episodes involving cyclizine. In the Danish National Patient Registry cohort 80.9% were alive after 10 years compared to 97.7% in the background population. Conclusion and Implications: Most poisonings were intentional and occurred among younger women. Psychiatric comorbidity was frequent. Most often, pharmaceuticals were the toxic substance, mainly quetiapine, paracetamol and cyclizine. Changing the status of cyclizine from over the counter to prescription only medication, and implementing stricter rules for prescribing quetiapine, could limit future poisoning incidences.

KW - comorbidities

KW - cyclizine

KW - Poison Information Centre

KW - prescription medicine

KW - quetiapine

KW - Repeated poisonings

U2 - 10.1080/15563650.2023.2205006

DO - 10.1080/15563650.2023.2205006

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37171194

AN - SCOPUS:85159082670

VL - 61

SP - 392

EP - 399

JO - Clinical Toxicology

JF - Clinical Toxicology

SN - 1556-3650

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 363358911