| Literature DB >> 27716346 |
Jayesh Dhanani1,2, John F Fraser3,4, Hak-Kim Chan5, Jordi Rello6,7,8, Jeremy Cohen9,10, Jason A Roberts9,10,11,12.
Abstract
Drug dosing in critically ill patients is challenging due to the altered drug pharmacokinetics-pharmacodynamics associated with systemic therapies. For many drug therapies, there is potential to use the respiratory system as an alternative route for drug delivery. Aerosol drug delivery can provide many advantages over conventional therapy. Given that respiratory diseases are the commonest causes of critical illness, use of aerosol therapy to provide high local drug concentrations with minimal systemic side effects makes this route an attractive option. To date, limited evidence has restricted its wider application. The efficacy of aerosol drug therapy depends on drug-related factors (particle size, molecular weight), device factors, patient-related factors (airway anatomy, inhalation patterns) and mechanical ventilation-related factors (humidification, airway). This review identifies the relevant factors which require attention for optimization of aerosol drug delivery that can achieve better drug concentrations at the target sites and potentially improve clinical outcomes.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27716346 PMCID: PMC5054555 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1448-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Mechanisms of particle deposition
Fig. 2Factors favourable for aerosol drug delivery in critically ill patients. Figure derived from references [19, 20, 25, 29, 31, 38, 45, 51, 81, 82, 91, 93, 130]. NIV non-invasive ventilation, HME heat and moisture exchanger, pMDI pressurized metered dose inhaler, AAD adaptive aerosol device, VMN vibrating mesh nebulizer, DPI dry powder inhaler, PEEP positive end-expiratory pressure
Fig. 3Effects of regional lung aeration and pneumonia on drug concentration in lungs. a Relationship of lung aeration (%) to pulmonary concentration of amikacin (μg/g) for different routes of administration. b Relationship of route of drug administration to pulmonary concentration of amikacin (μg/g) for different severities of pneumonia. Pulmonary concentrations derived from homogenized lung tissue specimens measured by an immunoenzymatic method. Figure derived from Elman et al. [47]
Comparison of different types of nebulizers
| Nebulizer type | Mechanism of action | Types | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jet [ | Pressurized gas forms a jet passing through a tube creating a low-pressure zone (Venturi effect) that draws liquid formulation into the jet stream (Bernoulli effect) | • With a corrugated tube | • Cheap | • Inefficient |
| • With a collection bag | • Easy to use | • Difficult to clean | ||
| Droplet size > 5 μm | • Breath-enhanced jet nebulizers | • Effective in delivering drugs that cannot be delivered with pMDIs and DPIs | • Need compressed gas and additional tubing | |
| • Breath-actuated jet nebulizers | • Breath-enhanced and breath-actuated options | |||
| Ultrasonic [ | Piezoelectric crystal converts an electrical signal into high-frequency vibrations in the liquid, forming an aerosol using cavitation and capillary mechanisms | • Small volume (e.g. for medications) | • Easy to use | • Large residual volume |
| • Large volume (e.g. for hypertonic saline used for sputum induction) | • More efficient than jet nebulizers | • Unable to nebulize viscous solutions | ||
| Drug output alpha vibration amplitude | • Shorter nebulization time (better for large volumes) | • Degradation of heat-sensitive materials—so inappropriate for proteins | ||
| Particle size alpha vibration frequency | ||||
| Droplet size variable, may be less than 5 μm | • Aerosol temperature 10–14 °C higher than that in jet nebulizer | |||
| • Large device size | ||||
| Vibrating mesh [ | Aerosol is produced by forcing the liquid using the micropumping action through the vibrating mesh containing funnel-shaped holes | • Active (e.g. Aeroneb®; Aerogen, Galway, Ireland) | • Silent operation, portable | • More expensive |
| Droplet size < 5 μm | ||||
| • Passive (e.g. Microair NE-U22®; Omron, Bannockburn, IL, USA) | • Short treatment time | • Cleaning can be difficult | ||
| • Minimal residual volume | • Drug dose needs to be adjusted in transition from jet nebulizers | |||
| • Self-contained power source | • Inability to use to aerosolize viscous liquids | |||
| • Optimize particle size for specific drugs | • Inability to aerosolize drugs that crystallize on drying | |||
| • More output efficiency than other nebulizers | ||||
| • Two to three times higher drug deposition compared with jet nebulizers | ||||
| • Aerosol temperature usually unchanged | ||||
| • Unchanged osmolality | ||||
| • Easy to use |
pMDI pressurized metered dose inhaler, DPI dry powder inhaler
Common applications of aerosol therapy in intensive carea
| Drug class | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feature | Bronchodilators | Anti-inflammatory | Antimicrobial agents | Vasoactive agents | Heliox |
| Indications | Bronchospasm (e.g. acute asthma, COPD exacerbation) | Airway inflammation (e.g. acute asthma or COPD exacerbation, acute interstitial lung disease) | MDR tracheobronchitis MDR pneumonia | Right ventricular failure | Asthma |
|
| Pulmonary hypertension | ||||
| Site of action | Airways | Airways or alveoli | Airways or alveoli | Alveoli | Airways |
| Preferred device | pMDI with spacer | pMDI with spacer | VMN | VMN | |
| Drugs | Beta-agonists (e.g. salbutamol, salmeterol) | Budesonide | Antibiotics (e.g. tobramycin, colistin, amikacin, ceftazidime, amphotericin B) | Epoprostenol | Helium |
| Anticholinergics (e.g. ipratropium, tiotropium) | Fluticasone | Iloprost | |||
| Formulations available | Yes | Yes | Some | Yes | |
Table derived from references [19, 24, 37, 87, 132–151]
aAnaesthetic gases were not in the objectives of this analysis
Heliox helium and oxygen, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, MDR multidrug resistant, pMDI pressurized metered dose inhaler, VMN vibrating mesh nebulizer
Fig. 4Comparison of lung concentration (measured by HPLC) of amikacin between aerosolized and intravenous administration. Measurement done 1 hour after the second administration performed 48 hours after bacterial inoculation. Diagram derived from the data of Goldstein et al. [49]
Fig. 5Comparison of lung concentration (measured by HPLC) and bacterial burden of colistin between aerosolized and intravenous administration. Samples taken 1 hour after the third aerosol in the aerosol group and the fourth infusion in the intravenous group and 49 hours after the bacterial inoculation. Diagram derived from data of Lu et al. [112]
Optimization of ventilator parameters required for aerosolization of antibiotics modified from Lu et al. [121]
| • Nebulizer placement—in the inspiratory limb 10 cm proximal to Y-piece | |
| • Diluted in 10 ml saline | |
| • Remove HME filter | |
| • Ventilation mode—volume controlled | |
| • Airflow pattern—constant inspiratory flow | |
| • Ventilator settings—RR 12/minute, 50 % I: E ratio, VT 8 ml/kg | |
| • End-inspiratory pause, 20 % duty cycle | |
| • Delivered over 60 minutes | |
| • Expired aerosolized particles collected in a filter |
HME heat and moisture exchanger, RR respiratory rate, I:E inspiratory: expiratory ratio, VT tidal volume