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Effect of age on the severity of chronic lithium poisoning

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posted on 2020-02-18, 16:42 authored by B. S. Chan, S. Cheng, K. Z. Isoardi, A. Chiew, W. Siu, B. Shulruf, E. Vecellio, N. A. Buckley

Objectives: Severe lithium toxicity is commonly observed in older people. We aimed to determine the extent to which age is associated with increased severity of chronic lithium poisoning and of which a range of possible factors might explain the associations.

Method: We did a retrospective review of patients aged ≥15 years old with serum lithium concentrations ≥1.3 mmol/L from three hospitals. Clinical details, treatment and outcomes were recorded. eGFR, creatinine and lithium clearance were calculated. The severity of lithium toxicity was graded into five categories (Amdisen score). ANOVA was used to quantify the association between age and severity. Spearman correlation coefficient was used to explore relationships between age and different factors expected to alter severity. Ordinal regression analysis was used to determine the interdependence of age and these factors and age on severity of lithium toxicity.

Results: From 2008–2018, there were 242 patients with a median age of 56.5 years (IQR: 41–69). There were 156 females (64%). There was a statistically significant association between Amdisen severity scores and age (p = .0004). The median calculated eGFR was 65 mL/min/1.73 m2 (IQR: 41–91) with a corresponding estimated lithium clearance of 18 mL/min (IQR: 13.8–22.8). There was no correlation of age with initial serum lithium concentration (p = .76). There was a strong correlation between age and estimated lithium clearance (r = –0.72, 95% CI: –0.78 to –0.66, p < .001), lithium daily dose (r = –0.65, 95% CI: –0.72 to –0.57, p < .0001) and lithium concentration/dose (r = 0.62, 95% CI: 0.53–0.69, p < .0001). There was a weak correlation between age and infection (r = 0.18, 95% CI: 0.04–0.31, p = .009) and drug interactions (r = 0.25, 95% CI: 0.11–0.37, p = .0003). Ordinal regression indicated the independent predictors for severity of lithium toxicity were lithium concentration (p < .0001) and lithium clearance (p = .03) adjusted for age and dose.

Conclusions: Despite lower lithium doses, older patients had more severe toxicity. Increased severity of lithium toxicity in the elderly is largely explainable by decreased lithium clearance from multiple factors such as age-related decline in renal function, drug interactions and infection.

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