Pediatric Fatalities Associated With Over-the-Counter Cough and Cold Medications
- PMID: 34607934
- DOI: 10.1542/peds.2020-049536
Pediatric Fatalities Associated With Over-the-Counter Cough and Cold Medications
Abstract
Background and objectives: In 2008, over-the-counter cough and cold medications (CCMs) underwent labeling changes in response to safety concerns, including fatalities, reported in children exposed to CCMs. The objective of this study is to describe fatalities associated with exposures to CCMs in children <12 years old that were detected by a safety surveillance system from 2008 to 2016.
Methods: Fatalities in children <12 years old that occurred between 2008 and 2016 associated with oral exposure to one or more CCMs were identified by the Pediatric Cough and Cold Safety Surveillance System. An expert panel reviewed all cases to determine the causal relationship between the exposure and death, if the intent of exposure was therapeutic, and if the dose was supratherapeutic. Other contributing factors related to the child's death were also identified as part of a root cause analysis.
Results: Of the 180 eligible fatalities captured during the study period, 40 were judged by the expert panel to be either related or potentially related to the CCM. Of these, the majority (n = 24; 60.0%) occurred in children <2 years old and involved nontherapeutic intent (n = 22; 55.0%). The most frequently involved index ingredient was diphenhydramine (n = 28; 70.0%). In 6 cases (n = 6; 15.0%), the CCM was administered to murder the child. In another 7 cases (n = 7; 17.5%), death followed the intentional use of the CCM to sedate the child.
Conclusions: Pediatric fatalities associated with CCMs occurred primarily in young children after deliberate medication administration with nontherapeutic intent by a caregiver.
Copyright © 2021 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Conflict of interest statement
POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: Drs Halmo and Wang, Ms Reynolds, Ms Delva-Clark, Ms Rapp-Olsson, and Drs Green and Dart were employees of Denver Health at the time the work was performed. Outside the submitted work, Ms Reynolds, Ms Delva-Clark, Ms Rapp-Olsson and Drs Green and Dart report grants from Johnson and Johnson Consumer Inc. Drs Wang and Dart receive royalties from UpToDate for authorship contributions, all outside the submitted work. Dr Paul reports personal fees from the Consumer Healthcare Products Association and Pfizer, all outside the submitted work; the other authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.
Comment in
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Pediatric Poisoning Fatalities: Beyond Cough and Cold Medications.Pediatrics. 2021 Nov;148(5):e2021052189. doi: 10.1542/peds.2021-052189. Epub 2021 Oct 4. Pediatrics. 2021. PMID: 34607933 No abstract available.
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