In-hospital haloperidol use and perioperative changes in QTc-duration

Publication date

2015-05-01

Authors

Blom, Marieke TISNI 0000000443809731
Jansen, S.ISNI 0000000419501016
de Jonghe, A.
van Munster, B. C.
de Boer, AnthoniusISNI 0000000389596105
de Rooij, S. E.
Tan, H. L.
van der Velde, Nathalie

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Objectives: Haloperidol may prolong ECG QTc-duration but is often prescribed perioperatively to hip-fracture patients. We aimed to determine (1) how QTc-duration changes perioperatively, (2) whether low-dose haloperidol-use influences these changes, and (3) which clinical variables are associated with potentially dangerous perioperative QTc-prolongation (PD-QTc; increase >50 ms or to >500 ms).Design: Prospective cohort study.Setting: Tertiary university teaching-hospital.Participants: Patients enrolled in a randomized controlled clinical trial of melatonin versus placebo on occurrence of delirium in hip-fracture patients.Measurements: Data from ECGs made before and after hip surgery (1–3 days and/or 4–6 days post-surgery) were analyzed. QTc-duration was measured by hand, blinded for haloperidol and pre/post-surgery status. Clinical variables were measured at baseline. Mixed model analysis was used to estimate changes in QTc-duration. Risk-factors for PD-QTc were estimated by logistic regression analysis.Results: We included 89 patients (mean age 84 years, 24% male); 39 were treated with haloperidol. Patients with normal pre-surgery QTc-duration (male ≤430 ms, female ≤450 ms) had a significant increase (mean 12 ms, SD 28) in QTc-duration. A significant decrease (mean 19 ms, SD 34) occurred in patients with prolonged pre-surgery QTc-duration (male >450ms, female >470 ms). Haloperidol-use did not influence the perioperative course of the QTc-interval (p=0.351). PD-QTc (n=8) was not associated with any of the measured risk-factors.Conclusion: QTc-duration changed differentially, increasing in patients with normal, but decreasing in patients with abnormal baseline QTc-duration. PD-QTc was not associated with haloperidol-use or other risk-factors. Low-dose oral haloperidol did not affect perioperative QTc-interval.

Keywords

haloperidol, perioperative period, QTc-prolongation, Taverne, Medicine (miscellaneous), Nutrition and Dietetics, Geriatrics and Gerontology

Citation

Blom, M T, Jansen, S, de Jonghe, A, van Munster, B C, de Boer, A, de Rooij, S E, Tan, H L & van der Velde, N 2015, 'In-hospital haloperidol use and perioperative changes in QTc-duration', The Journal of Nutrition, Health & Aging, vol. 19, no. 5, pp. 583-589. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12603-015-0465-4