Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Case fatality and population mortality associated with anaphylaxis in the United States.

BACKGROUND: Anaphylaxis is a serious allergic reaction that can cause death; however, the actual risk of death is unclear.

OBJECTIVE: We sought to estimate the case fatality rate among hospitalizations or emergency department (ED) presentations for anaphylaxis and the mortality rate associated with anaphylaxis for the general population.

METHODS: This was a population-based epidemiologic study using 3 national databases: the Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS; 1999-2009), the Nationwide Emergency Department Sample (NEDS; 2006-2009), and Multiple Cause of Death Data (MCDD; 1999-2009). Sources for these databases are hospital and ED discharge records and death certificates, respectively.

RESULTS: Case fatality rates were between 0.25% and 0.33% among hospitalizations or ED presentations with anaphylaxis as the principal diagnosis (NIS+NEDS, 2006-2009). These rates represent 63 to 99 deaths per year in the United States, approximately 77% of which occurred in hospitalized patients. The rate of anaphylaxis-related hospitalizations increased from 21.0 to 25.1 per million population between 1999 and 2009 (annual percentage change, 2.23%; 95% CI, 1.52% to 2.94%), contrasting with a decreasing case fatality rate among hospitalizations (annual percentage change, -2.35%; 95% CI, -4.98% to 0.34%). Overall mortality rates ranged from 0.63 to 0.76 per million population (186-225 deaths per year, MCDD) and appeared stable in the last decade (annual percentage change, -0.31%; 95% CI, -1.54% to 0.93%).

CONCLUSION: From 2006 to 2009, the overwhelming majority of hospitalizations or ED presentations for anaphylaxis did not result in death, with an average case fatality rate of 0.3%. Anaphylaxis-related hospitalizations increased steadily in the last decade (1999-2009), but this increase was offset by the decreasing case fatality rate among those hospitalized; both inpatient and overall mortality rates associated with anaphylaxis appeared stable and were well under 1 per million population. Although anaphylactic reactions are potentially life-threatening, the probability of dying is actually very low. With the prevalence of anaphylaxis on the increase, practitioners need to stay vigilant and follow the treatment guidelines to further reduce anaphylaxis-related deaths.

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