| Literature DB >> 24558330 |
Samantha F Holliday1, Sandra L Kane-Gill2, Philip E Empey2, Mitchell S Buckley3, Pamela L Smithburger2.
Abstract
Fifty-five thousand patients are cared for in the intensive care unit (ICU) daily with sedation utilized to reduce anxiety and agitation while optimizing comfort. The Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) released updated guidelines for management of pain, agitation, and delirium in the ICU and recommended nonbenzodiazepines, such as dexmedetomidine and propofol, as first line sedation agents. Dexmedetomidine, an alpha-2 agonist, offers many benefits yet its use is mired by the inability to consistently achieve sedation goals. Three hypotheses including patient traits/characteristics, pharmacokinetics in critically ill patients, and clinically relevant genetic polymorphisms that could affect dexmedetomidine response are presented. Studies in patient traits have yielded conflicting results regarding the role of race yet suggest that dexmedetomidine may produce more consistent results in less critically ill patients and with home antidepressant use. Pharmacokinetics of critically ill patients are reported as similar to healthy individuals yet wide, unexplained interpatient variability in dexmedetomidine serum levels exist. Genetic polymorphisms in both metabolism and receptor response have been evaluated in few studies, and the results remain inconclusive. To fully understand the role of dexmedetomidine, it is vital to further evaluate what prompts such marked interpatient variability in critically ill patients.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24558330 PMCID: PMC3914598 DOI: 10.1155/2014/805013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Studies evaluating the role of patient features/traits.
| Citation | Study design | Population | Objective | Intervention | Results |
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Tellor et al. | R, O | (i) 75 MV adults with 85 episodes of DEX infusion. | To describe rates of DEX intolerance/failure and identify patient predictors of intolerance/failure. | (i) All patients received DEX titrated by the bedside nurse from 0.2 mcg/kg/h to a maximum of 1.5 mcg/kg/h to achieve targeted sedation with rescue fentanyl, midazolam, and propofol permissible. | (i) 18 episodes (21%) were classified as intolerance/failure. 67 episodes (79%) were classified as successful. |
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Kurnik et al. | P, O | (i) 73 healthy individuals. | To evaluate the clinical effect of ethnicity on CV effects by changes in BP and HR and plasma NE concentrations. | (i) Patients received 3 placebo infusions then 3 DEX infusions (0.1, 0.15, 0.15 mcg/kg for total of 0.4 mcg/kg). | (i) No significant differences in BP, HR, and plasma NE concentrations for ethnicity were detected. |
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Smith-burger et al. | P, O | 38 MV patients (32 Caucasian, 6 Blacks). | To identify patient specific characteristics that affect achievement of successful sedation with DEX. | (i) All patients received DEX to achieve targeted sedation based upon unit sedation protocol. | (i) DEX was ineffective in 19 (50%) patients. It was effective in 11 (28.95%) patients. In the remaining patients ( |
R: retrospective; O: observational; P: prospective; MV: mechanically ventilated; DEX: dexmedetomidine; CV: cardiovascular; BP: blood pressure; HR: heart rate; NE: norepinephrine; ADRA-2C: alpha adrenergic receptor 2C; APACHE II: A Modified Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation.
Studies evaluating pharmacokinetics in critically ill patients.
| Citation | Study Design | Population | Objective | Intervention | Results |
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Iirola et al. | P, O | (i) 13 ICU patients. | To describe PK of prolonged (>24 hrs) and HD DEX in critically ill patients and to determine if a linear relationship remains. | (i) All patients received DEX at a constant rate for the first 12 hours (doses were 0.1, 0.2, 0.45, or 0.7 mcg/kg/hr with no LD) then titrated by bedside nurse to goal sedation score. The dose allowed was 0.1–2.5 mcg/kg/hr. | (i) DEX retained a linear relationship at doses of 2.5 mcg/kg/hr ( |
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Iirola et al. | P, O | 21 ICU patients. | To describe PK of prolonged (>48 hrs) DEX infusions in critically ill patients. | (i) All patients received a LD of 3–6 mcg/kg/hr over 10 min then a maintenance infusion of 0.1–2.5 mcg/kg/hr titrated by bedside nurse to desired sedation. | (i) PK parameters remained similar to those reported in healthy individuals. |
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Välitalo et al. | P, O | (i) 527 ICU patients enrolled in phase III studies of prolonged (>24 hrs) DEX infusion. | To describe PK of prolonged (>24 hrs) DEX infusions in critically ill patients. | (i) All patients received an initial infusion of 0.7 | (i) PK parameters remained similar to those reported in healthy individuals. |
P: prospective, O: observational; ICU: intensive care unit; PK: pharmacokinetics; HD: high dose; DEX: dexmedetomidine; LD: loading dose; Cls: clearance; SAPS II: Simplified Acute Physiology Score; CO: cardiac output; V ss: volume of distribution at steady state.
Studies evaluating role of genetic polymorphisms.
| Citation | Study design | Gene studied | Population | Objective | Intervention | Results |
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Kohli et al. | P, O | CYP2A6 | 43 MV patients in medical and surgical ICU | To determine the effect of CYP2A6 polymorphisms on DEX Cls. | (i) All patients received DEX. | No significant difference in DEX amongst normal (48.5 L/h; 39.8–58.7 L/hr), intermediate (56.9 L/hr; 31.6–94.4 L/hr) or slow (86.2 L/hr; 26.9–218.7 L/hr) metabolizers. |
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Choi et al. | P, O | CYP2A6 | 43 critically ill patients. | To develop a new population PK model to more accurately accommodate outliers. | (i) All patients received DEX titrated by the bedside nurse from 0.15 mcg/kg/h to a maximum of 1.5 mcg/kg/h to achieve targeted sedation. | Incorporation of CYP2A6 genotype as a covariate did not alter the population pharmacokinetics. |
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Ya | P, O | ADRA-2A | 110 patients undergoing CABG. | To evaluate the clinical effect of the ADRA-2A C-1291G polymorphism on DEX response via HD effects and sedation. | (i) All patients received DEX after surgery once in the ICU to a targeted infusion rate of 1.4 mcg/kg/hr. | (i) No significant difference in HD (SAP, DAP, HR) effects. |
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Kurnik et al. (2011) | P, O | ADRA-2A | 73 healthy individuals. | To evaluate the clinical effect of ADRA-2A polymorphisms on CV effects of DEX by changes in SBP and plasma NE concentrations. | (i) Patients received 3 placebo infusions then 3 DEX infusions (0.1, 0.15, 0.15 mcg/kg for total of 0.4 mcg/kg). | (i) After a sensitivity analysis, individuals who were homozygous or carriers of HT3 had a 39% (0.61 fold) smaller decrease (ΔSBP= 8.8 ± 6.5 mmHG and 14.5 ± 6.1 mmHG, respectively; |
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Kurnik et al. | P, O | ADRA-2C | 73 healthy individuals (37 Caucasians, 36 Blacks). | To evaluate the presence of the ethnic differences in the response to DEX through the clinical effect of ADRA-2C del322-325 polymorphism and G-protein GNB3 C825T polymorphism on CV effects by changes in BP and HR and plasma NE concentrations. | (i) Patients received 3 placebo infusions then 3 DEX infusions (0.1, 0.15, 0.15 mcg/kg for total of 0.4 mcg/kg). | No significant differences in BP, HR, and plasma NE concentrations for both ADRA-2C del322-325 and GNB3 C825T polymorphism were detected. |
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Kohli et al. | P, O | ADRA-2C | 73 healthy individuals (37 Caucasians, 36 Blacks). | To evaluate the clinical effect of several ADRA-2C polymorphisms on pain perception and cognitive responses. | (i) Pain rating via VAS from a cold pressor test before infusions and 30 min after the final DEX infusion. | (i) VAS scores from patients with del322-325 were significantly higher than any other polymorphism ( |
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Muszkat et al. | P, O | ADRA-2B | 49 healthy individuals. | To examine the clinical effect of ADRA-2B del 301-303 polymorphism on vascular response. | (i) Patients were grouped into wt/wt ( | (i) There was no difference in ED50 and |
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Muszkat et al. | P, O |
| 62 healthy individuals (28 Caucasian, 34 Blacks). | To determine if adrenergic vasoconstriction sensitivity through | (i) Patients received either DEX at increasing doses ranging from 0.01–100 ng/min or phenylephrine at increasing doses ranging from 12–12000 ng/min. | (i) Median ED50 for DEX was 1.32 ng/min (IQR 0.45–5.37 ng/min) and for phenylephrine was 177.8 ng/min (IQR 40.7–436.5 ng/min). |
P: prospective; O: observation; MV: mechanical ventilation, ICU: intensive care unit; DEX: dexmedetomidine; Cls: clearance; PK: pharmacokinetic; CABG: coronary artery bypass graft; ADRA-2A: alpha adrenergic receptor 2A; HD: hemodynamic; SAP: systolic arterial pressure; DAP: diastolic arterial pressure; HR: heart rate; ICU: intensive care unit; BIS: bispectral index; RSS: Ramsay Sedation Scale; CV: cardiovascular; SBP: systolic blood pressure; NE: norepinephrine; BP: blood pressure; VAS: visual analogue scale; IQR: interquartile range.