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European Journal Of Anaesthesiology

Publication date: 2022-03-01
Volume: 39 Pages: 210 - 218
Publisher: Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins

Author:

Kowark, Ana
Berger, Moritz ; Rossaint, Rolf ; Schmid, Matthias ; Coburn, Mark ; POSE-Study group, ; Tournoy, Jos

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Anesthesiology, EUROPEAN-SOCIETY, GUIDELINE, PNEUMONIA, SURVIVAL, OLDER, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Benzodiazepines, Humans, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Premedication, Propensity Score, Prospective Studies, POSE-Study group, 1103 Clinical Sciences, 3202 Clinical sciences

Abstract:

Background: Recent guidelines suggest that benzodiazepine premedication should be avoided in elderly patients, though with limited supporting evidence. Objective: We conducted a secondary analysis of the POSE data to explore the association of premedication in patients aged 80 years or older with 30-day mortality. Design: We used propensity score methods to perform a confounder-adjusted time-to-event analysis of the association between benzodiazepine premedication and 30-day mortality of the POSE study. Setting: POSE was conducted as a European multicentre prospective cohort study. Patients: Adults aged 80 years or older scheduled for surgical or nonsurgical intervention under anaesthesia. Results: A total of 9497 patients were analysed. One thousand five hundred and twenty-one patients received benzodiazepine premedication, 7936 patients received no benzodiazepine premedication, 30 received clonidine and 10 had missing premedication data. Inverse propensity-score-weighted log-rank analysis did not provide unambiguous evidence for an association between benzodiazepine premedication and 30-day mortality; median [range] P = 0.048 [0.044 to 0.078], estimated 30-day mortality rates 3.21% and 4.45% in benzodiazepine-premedicated and nonbenzodiazepine-premedicated patients, respectively. Inverse propensity-score-weighted Cox regression resulted in a hazard ratio of 0.71 (95% CI 0.49 to 1.04), pointing at a possible reduction of 30-day mortality in the benzodiazepine premedication group. Sensitivity analyses, which constituted subgroup, matched-pairs, and subclassification analyses, resulted in similar findings. Conclusion: This secondary analysis of the POSE data did not find evidence for an unambiguous association between benzodiazepine premedication and 30-day mortality. Point estimates indicated a reduction of 30-day mortality in benzodiazepine-premedicated patients. The results presented here might be affected by unmeasured confounding factors, which could be addressed in a randomised trial. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03152734.