Anesthesia Patient Safety Podcast
The official podcast of the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation (APSF) is hosted by Alli Bechtel, MD, featuring the latest information and news in perioperative and anesthesia patient safety. The APSF podcast is intended for anesthesiologists, anesthetists, clinicians and other professionals with an interest in anesthesiology, and patient safety advocates around the world.
The Anesthesia Patient Safety Podcast delivers the best of the APSF Newsletter and website directly to you, so you can listen on the go! This includes some of the most important COVID-19 information on airway management, ventilators, personal protective equipment (PPE), drug information, and elective surgery recommendations.
Don't forget to check out APSF.org for the show notes that accompany each episode, and email us at podcast@APSF.org with your suggestions for future episodes. Visit us at APSF.org/podcast and at @APSForg on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.
Anesthesia Patient Safety Podcast
#306 Venezuelan Ancestry Anesthesia Alert
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Catastrophic neurologic injury after a routine anesthetic is the kind of signal that stops you in your tracks, and that’s exactly why we’re talking about new perioperative recommendations for patients with maternal Venezuelan ancestry. We’ve seen reports of otherwise healthy adults and children who deteriorated after general anesthesia, with sevoflurane appearing repeatedly in the documented events. That pattern has led the American Society of Anesthesiologists and the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia to issue updated guidance aimed at preventing harm while the science catches up.
We walk through what clinicians need to know about the suspected mitochondrial link and why maternal lineage matters for risk assessment. We also discuss why a negative family history does not reliably protect a patient and why laboratories must be explicitly alerted to the mutation of interest because it has been historically labeled a normal variant.
Then, we get practical: how to screen for maternal Venezuelan heritage with care and sensitivity, how to explain the question without implying anything about immigration status, and how to approach anesthetic planning when definitive genetic testing is unavailable. We cover current thinking on avoiding volatile anesthetics, when regional anesthesia may help, considerations around propofol infusions, processed EEG monitoring, and postoperative observation for return to neurocognitive baseline. If this is helpful, please subscribe, share the episode with your team, and leave a review so more clinicians can find these patient safety updates.
For show notes & transcript, visit our episode page at apsf.org: https://www.apsf.org/podcast/306-venezuelan-ancestry-anesthesia-alert/
© 2026, The Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation
Welcome And Why This Matters
AlliThere are reports of healthy adults and pediatric patients of Venezuelan ancestry undergoing routine general anesthetics who have suffered unexpected catastrophic outcomes, including severe neurologic damage and death. Keep your practice up to date and your patients safe with these new recommendations for patients of Venezuelan ancestry from the American Society of Anesthesiologists and the Society of Pediatric Anesthesia. Anesthesia professionals should consider asking patients about maternal Venezuelan heritage. A negative family history of anesthetic complications does not eliminate risk. Any patient with direct maternal Venezuelan lineage should be considered at risk. Anesthesia professionals should handle questions regarding Venezuelan ancestry and associated explanations with care and sensitivity. And anesthesia professionals should consult with genetic experts regarding testing at-risk patients, and laboratories should be alerted to the specific ND4G mutation. Hello and welcome back to the Anesthesia Patient Safety Podcast. I'm your host, Allie Bechtel. Before we dive further into the episode today, we'd like to recognize Medtronic, a major corporate supporter of APSF. Medtronic has generously provided unrestricted support to further our vision that no one shall be harmed by anesthesia care. Thank you, Medtronic. We wouldn't be able to do all that we do without you. Our featured article is Perioperative Practices for Patients of Venezuelan Ancestry by Mega Kangia and colleagues. This article is an APSF article between issues published online March 13, 2026. To follow along with us, head over to APSF.org and click on the newsletter heading. The second one down is APSF Articles Between Issues. Then you can scroll down until you get to our featured article today. And I will include a link in the show notes as well. Concerns were first raised by anesthesiology societies in South America of sporadic anecdotal reports of otherwise healthy patients of Venezuelan descent who developed significant neurologic injury following uneventful anesthetics. This has led to the American Society of Anesthesiologists and the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia and Wake Up Safe Groups issuing a joint statement warning about these safety concerns in July of 2025. This warning was then updated in January 2026 with additional details, including the following that high-risk patients have maternal Venezuelan ancestry, and there may be specific genetic mitochondrial mutations combined with sevofluorine, and this combination may lead to a catastrophic outcome. We are still learning more about this, and it has been difficult to figure out what is going on. Family histories have been inconsistent with some patients reporting family members with adverse events related to anesthesia, and others reporting no family history of problems with anesthesia in the past. We have seen that all of the events occurred following an anesthetic with sevofluorine. Genetic testing has found that the mutation most implicated is the NADH dehydrogenase 4 gene located in complex 1 of the electron transport chain. Volatile anesthetics and propofol both interact with complex 1 and may increase the risk, but it is more complicated than that. Additional mitochondrial genomic variants have been found in affected patients, so there may be genetic heterogenicity. Let's look at this a little closer. Mitochondrial mutations may be homoplasmic or heteroplasmic, and this depends on the number of mitochondria carrying the mutation. The severity of the reaction to the anesthetic likely depends on the amount of affected mitochondria. The cases that have been studied so far have been shown that the patients were homoplasmic, meaning 100% of the mitochondria were carrying the mutation. Mitochondrial DNA is maternally inherited, so the mutation would likely be present in all offspring of an affected mother. So if this is confirmed, the mother and all siblings of an affected child would carry the same mutation. Patients with this specific mitochondrial gene mutation have a significant hypersensitivity to inhaled anesthetics, which looks like patients with severe mitochondrial complex 1 disease. We still don't know if propofol can cause the same adverse reaction since long-term outcome data are limited. This is an important area for careful consideration and research, especially for patients receiving propofol infusions. At this time, all of the reported adverse events have followed exposure to sevofluorane, though. Let's review the current recommendations for patients of Venezuelan ancestry from the ASA and SPA. I will include the links to these updates in the show notes as well. Here are the recommendations for screening patients. Anesthesiologists should consider asking their patients about potential maternal Venezuelan heritage. However, a negative family history of anesthetic complications does not rule out the risk caused by this type of genetic mutation. All mitochondrial DNA is inherited directly from the mother. Therefore, any patient with direct maternal Venezuelan lineage should be considered at risk. And number two, anesthesiologists should be prepared to respond to concerns from patients about questions regarding Venezuelan ancestry and should approach these questions and associated explanations with care and sensitivity. Next up, here are the recommendations for genetic testing. Mitochondrial DNA sequencing of patients and or their maternal relatives may be available to confirm the presence of the mutation. Additionally, it is important to alert testing laboratories of the specific mutation of interest, which you can find in the show notes. Historically, laboratories have interpreted this mutation as a normal variant. The genetic laboratory should be asked to report whether this mutation is present or absent. Anesthesiologists should consider consulting their local genetics experts to identify laboratories that can perform genetic testing in patients at risk and to assist in the management of any patients or families found to have the mutation of concern. And finally, informed consent should be obtained from the patient or authorized caregiver for any genetic testing. And now we come to the recommendations for clinical management based on the current evidence. Number one, the urgency of the procedure should inform the decision to proceed with the anesthetic. Number two, in the absence of definitive genetic testing, if the decision is made to proceed with anesthesia and the patient is considered to be at risk, the anesthetic plan should be developed considering the following. The optimal and safest anesthetic for patients with this ND4 mutation has not been established. Given the majority of affected patients are reported to have received sevofluorine, consider avoiding the use of all volatile anesthetics until more information is available. Regional anesthesia should be considered for appropriate patients and procedures. Based on verbal reports, patients who have had complications from sevofluorine-based anesthetics have had uneventful propofol anesthetics. It is not yet known whether prolonged use of propofol infusions is safe in this population. Midazolam, dexmedatominine, ketamine, and short or ultra-short-acting opioids have not been implicated. Anesthetic depth monitoring with processed EEG to avoid burst suppression may be advisable. Some patients with complex 1 gene mutations show a rapid change, that is, a decrease in EEG activity with exposure to volatile anesthetics. It is unknown at this time if this rapid change is seen in patients of Venezuelan ancestry with the mutation. Patients at risk should be monitored after general anesthesia for return to their neurocognitive baseline. Consider extended postoperative observation and monitoring of acid-base status if complications are suspected. We hope that you will check out the full ASA and SPA updates as well. Further research will help to answer important questions, including the following: What is the prevalence and penetrance of this mutation in the population? Are there specific levels of anesthetic or a type of anesthetic that causes the most significant reactions? Is this mitochondrial mutation the only mutation that can cause this reaction? Or are there other mutations or nucleotide interactions that can cause this reaction as well? Research is needed in this area to keep patients safe during anesthetic care. In addition, SPA and the ASA will continue to monitor for cases and update recommendations as needed. If you observe similar complications to those described on the podcast today, we hope that you will consider reporting the event locally and consider reporting cases to a patient safety organization and the Anesthesia Incident Reporting System that is housed within the Anesthesia Quality Institute. I will include the link in the show notes. These reports are confidential and protected as a federally designated patient safety organization. Submitting a report to the Anesthesia Incident Reporting System is the best way to bring together known or suspected cases to a central protected registry. Another way to help keep your patients safe is to use appropriate screening questions to identify high-risk patients. These questions can be sensitive, so it's important to provide a short explanation for why the question is being asked. It is also important to highlight that these questions are not related to immigration status. Some pediatric hospitals use a scripted approach to this topic along with informational handouts available in the preoperative area for patients and families. Here is an example that you may be able to use for screening pediatric patients. All children respond to anesthesia medications differently. We are currently learning that some children respond differently to specific medications, which we commonly use, and recently a link has been reported around children of a specific background. Our goal is to provide the best anesthetic and select the best medications for your child. So we are asking families about their ancestry. In some case reports, children born to mothers of Venezuelan ethnicity have had challenges in metabolizing medications that we commonly use. We are avoiding specific medications, which may be more difficult for them to break down if we have this information about the maternal ancestry. Anesthesia professionals should highlight that there are safe anesthetic options for patients who may have mitochondrial defects, and the best medications will be selected based on the patient's history and other comorbidities. Going forward, it will be important to stay up to date with any new evidence or new approaches as we learn more about this mutation and the interactions with anesthetic medications. If you have any questions or comments from today's show, please email us at podcast atapsf.org. Please keep in mind that the information in this show is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical or legal advice. We hope that you will visit apSF.org for detailed information and check out the show notes for links to all the topics we discussed today. We are excited to announce the 2026 APSF Trainee Quality Improvement Patient Safety Recognition Program. This program hosts tracks for physician anesthesiology residents, nurse anesthesia students, and student anesthesiology assistants. Eligible participants should include current trainees and those who graduated in the immediately prior academic year. This is your chance to demonstrate your program's work in patient safety and QI initiatives. The winner in each track will be notified around August 1st, 2026, and the APSF will sponsor the winners to attend the 2026 Stolting Conference in National Harbor, Maryland to share your work and network with attendees. Here's how to submit your work. You may independently determine the best media for submitting your project summary. Acceptable formats include a document or an audio or video recording. The submission deadline is coming up. It's June 1st, 2026, so you have a little bit of time left to get organized and get excited to submit your best work and support the APSF vision. Check out the show notes for more information about the submission process. You can also email traineeqi at apf.org with any questions. Until next time, stay vigilant so that no one shall be harmed by anesthesia care.