| Literature DB >> 21917139 |
Nicholas Heming1, Christophe Faisy, Saïk Urien.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Acetazolamide is commonly given to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients with metabolic alkalosis. Little is known of the pharmacodynamics of acetazolamide in the critically ill. We undertook the pharmacodynamic modeling of bicarbonate response to acetazolamide in COPD patients under mechanical ventilation.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21917139 PMCID: PMC3334757 DOI: 10.1186/cc10448
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Main characteristics of the study population (N = 68)a
| Characteristics | Value |
|---|---|
| Age, years, median (range) | 74 (44 to 99) |
| Male/female gender, | 40 (58.9)/28 (41.1) |
| Smoker, pack-years, median (range) | 50 (10 to 130) |
| Ex-smoker, | 46 (67.6) |
| Diuretic treatment more than four weeks, | 21 (30.9) |
| Systemic corticosteroid treatment more than four weeks, | 5 (7.3) |
| Home oxygen therapy, | 26 (38.2) |
| Home noninvasive ventilation, | 6 (8.8) |
| Body weight, kg, median (range) | 61.8 (34 to 142) |
| FEV1, mL, median (range) | 800 (350 to 1940) |
| FEV1/FVC, %, median (range) | 50.9 (24 to 66) |
| LVEF, %, median (range) | 60 (20 to 80) |
| SAPS II at ICU admission, median (range) | 47 (20 to 95) |
| Lenght of ICU stay, days, median (range) | 21 (6 to 123) |
| Length of invasive mechanical ventilation, days, median (range) | 18 (3 to 110) |
| ICU mortality, | 16 (23.5) |
| Cause of respiratory failure | |
| Pneumonia, | 22 (32.4) |
| Bronchitis, | 17 (25) |
| Left ventricular failure, | 5 (7.3) |
| Surgery, | 4 (5.9) |
| Use of sedative drugs, | 6 (8.8) |
| Pulmonary embolism, | 1 (1.5) |
| Unknown, | 13 (19.1) |
| Laboratory measurements before onset ACET administration | |
| pH, median (range) | 7.45 (7.34 to 7.57) |
| PaCO2, mmHg, median (range) | 55 (36 to 93) |
| PaO2, mmHg, median (range) | 78 (41 to 136) |
| Serum bicarbonate, mmol/L, median (range) | 37.5 (27 to 58) |
| Serum potassium, mmol/L, median (range) | 3.8 (2.7 to 4.6) |
| Serum chloride, mmol/L, median (range) | 96 (69 to 108) |
| Serum protein, g/L, median (range) | 57 (40 to 72) |
| Serum creatinine, μmol/L, median (range) | 64 (22 to 202) |
| Additional treatments during ACET administration | |
| Furosemide, | 32 (47.1) |
| Systemic glucocorticoid, | 10 (14.7) |
| β2-agonists, | 8 (11.7) |
| Fluid load, mL, median (range) | 1, 000 (0 to 2, 300) |
| Pressure-support ventilation, | 31 (45.6) |
| Volume-assisted ventilation, | 37 (54.4) |
aACET, acetazolamide; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in one second; FVC, forced vital capacity; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; PaCO2, partial pressure of carbon dioxide; PaO2, partial pressure of oxygen; SAPS II, Simplified Acute Physiology Score II.
Figure 1Differences between pre-acetazolamide dose bicarbonate level and bicarbonate level at 24 hours in all patients, plotted according to the total dosage of acetazolamide administered. Boxplots show the medians, first and third quartiles and 10th and 90th percentiles. The zero level at predose indicates that these values are based on intrapatient differences (repeated measures). Predose values: median 37.5; 25th and 75th percentiles 34 and 41, respectively; and 10th and 90th percentiles 30 and 45 mmol/L, respectively.
Parameter estimates of the final acetazolamide population model in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (N = 68)a
| Parameter | Estimate (%rse) | BSV (%rse) [shrinkage] |
|---|---|---|
| Half-life, day | 0.25 (fixed) | NA |
| Bicar0, mmol/L | 35.5 (2) | 0.101 (9) [0.04] |
| × SAPS II effect (SAPS II/50)-0.11 | -0.112 (39) | |
| × Corticosteroid effect, if present | 1.092 (41) | |
| × Serum chloride effect (chloride/100) -1.17 | -1.18 (17) | |
| 0.395 (17) | 0.792 (15) [0.27] | |
| Fur50 | 187 (21) | |
| A50 | 117 (18) | NA |
| Residual variability | 0.04 (8) | NA |
a%rse, percentage relative standard error; ACET, acetazolamide; A50, ACET dosage that provokes 50% of putative maximal effect on serum bicarbonate; BSV, between-subject variability; Bicar0, bicarbonate baseline level; Fur50: furosemide dose that induces a 50% decrease of kout; kout, first-order constant rate of bicarbonate elimination; NA, not applicable; SAPS II, Simplified Acute Physiology Score II; TV: typical value. When COPD patients received ACET, the effect of covariates on observed serum bicarbonate levels was Bicar0 = TV(Bicar0) × (SAPS II/50)-0.11 × (chloride/100)-1.17 × (1.1 if glucocorticoids) and kout = TV(kout) × [1 - furosemide dosage/(furosemide dosage + Fur50)]. Shrinkage was calculated as [1 - sd(η)/ω], where sd(η) and ω are the standard deviation of individual η parameters and the population model estimate of the BSV, respectively.
Figure 2Goodnees-of-fit plots for the final model of acetazolamide pharmacodynamics. Shown are the results for 68 weaning chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients. Observed versus model-predicted serum bicarbonate concentrations for (A) mean and (B) individual predictions and (C) normalized prediction distribution errors (NPDEs) versus predicted serum bicarbonate concentrations. The solid lines represent the identity lines and the dotted lines represent the regression lines. The mean and variance of the NPDE distribution were not significantly different from 0 and 1, respectively (P = 0.66 and P = 0.60, respectively; Wilcoxon signed-rank test and Fisher variance test, respectively) and from normality (P = 0.052, Shapiro-Wilks test), illustrating the robusteness of serum bicarbonate prediction after acetazolamide administration.
Figure 3Model-predicted effect of 125 mg, 250 mg, 500 mg or 1, 000 mg of acetazolamide. Shown are the effects of acetazolamide (ACET) administered once daily on serum bicarbonate in the presence of (A) low or high levels of serum chloride, (B) coprescription or not of 20 to 160 mg/day furosemide or (C) coprescription or no coprescription of 1 mg/kg/day systemic cortocosteroids. Modelization of ACET pharmacodynamics was derived from 68 chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients during the weaning period with metabolic alkalosis (Simplified Acute Physiology Score II at ICU admission was standardized at 50 and is shown in all parts of the figure). A higher ACET dosage is required to reduce serum bicarbonate concentrations > 5 mmol/L when high chloride or coprescription of systemic corticosteroids or furosemide occurs.