| Literature DB >> 29290034 |
Piotr Smuszkiewicz1, Paweł Wiczling2, Justyna Ber3, Justyna Warzybok3, Tomasz Małkiewicz4, Jan Matysiak5, Agnieszka Klupczyńska5, Iwona Trojanowska1, Zenon Kokot5, Edmund Grześkowiak3, Wojciech Krzyzanski6, Agnieszka Bienert7.
Abstract
Dexmedetomidine (DEX) is a fairly new alfa2-agonist which has been increasingly used in recent years for analgosedation, mostly because it offers a unique ability of providing both moderate level of sedation and analgesia without respiratory depression. Despite of many papers published, there are still only a few concerning the PK of the drug given as long-term infusion in ICU patients. The aim of this work was to characterize the population pharmacokinetics of dexmedetomidine and to investigate the potential benefits of individualization of drug dosing based on patient characteristics in the heterogeneous group of medical and surgical patients staying in intensive care unit. This study was performed in the group of 17 males and 10 females patients with a median age of 59.5 years and median body weight of 75 kg. Blood samples for dexmedetomidine assay were collected from arterial catheter, during and after discontinuation of a standard infusion, that ranged from 24 to 102 h. The following covariates were examined to influence dexmedetomidine PK: age, sex, body weight, patients' health status described by Sequential Organ Failure Assessment Score (SOFA), inotropes usage, and infusion duration. The dexmedetomidine PK was best described by a two-compartment model. The typical values of PK parameters were estimated as 27 L for the volume of the central compartment, 87.6 L for the volume of the peripheral compartment, 38.5 L/h (9.2 mL/min/kg for a 70 kg patient) for systemic clearance and 46.4 L/h for the distribution clearance. Those values are consistent with literature findings. We were unable to show any significant relationship between collected covariates and dexmedetomidine PK. This study does not provide sufficient evidence to support the individualization of dexmedetomidine dosing based on age, sex, body weight, SOFA, and infusion duration.Entities:
Keywords: Dexmedetomidine; ICU; Pharmacokinetic; Sedation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29290034 PMCID: PMC5845053 DOI: 10.1007/s10928-017-9564-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharmacokinet Pharmacodyn ISSN: 1567-567X Impact factor: 2.745
Fig. 1The individual dexmedetomidine concentration–time profiles
Demographic characterization of patients
| Parameter (unit) | Median (range or number) |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 59.5 (19–84) |
| Weight (kg) | 75 (45–100) |
| Male/female | 17/10 |
| Infusion TIME (h) | 42.8 (23.7–102) |
| Total dose of dex (mg) | 1.55 (0.29–6.67) |
| Infusion rate (μg/kg/h) | 0.51 (0.1–1.5) |
| Use of inotropes (yes/no) | 21/6 |
| SYS/DIA (mmHg) | 138/65 (60–286/34–155) |
| MAP (mmHg) | 90 (55–152) |
| HR (bpm) | 80 (45–200) |
| SOFA (scale) | 12 (5–16) |
Results are expressed as median or range
SOFA (Sequential Organ Failure Assessment) denotes a score to estimate the severity of organ dysfunction and mortality in a potentially septic patient
Fig. 2The prediction-corrected VPC plots for dexmedetomidine PK. The VPC plots show the simulation-based 95% confidence intervals around the 10th, 50th, and 90th percentiles of the PK data in the form of blue (50th) and gray (10th and 90th) areas. The corresponding percentiles from the prediction corrected observed data are plotted in black color
The parameter estimates of the final PK model of dexmedetomidine
| Parameter (unit) | Description | θ, estimate (%RSE) [Shrinkage] | Estimate, bootstrap median (%RSE) [5th–95th CI] |
|---|---|---|---|
| Volume of central compartment | 27.0 (31.6) | 25.1 (38.6) [12.0–44.8] | |
| Systemic clearance | 38.5 (12.0) | 38.2 (12.1) [32.0–46.8] | |
| θ | Volume of peripheral compartment | 87.6 (17.4) | 88.9 (18.8) [65.5–119] |
| θ | Inter-compartmental clearance | 46.4 (25.6) | 48.8 (28.8) [28.5–74.2] |
| Between subject variability | |||
| ω | Inter-individual variability of | 124 (21.8) [17.6] | 117 (29.7) [51.2–162] |
| ω | Inter-individual variability of | 63.2 (12.0) [0.0] | 62.3 (12.2) [49.8–73.8] |
| ω | Inter-individual variability of | 89.0 (21.3) [23.6] | 85.6 (47.1) [9.0–116] |
| ω | Inter-individual variability of | 80.9 (25.0) [10.6] | 77.7 (29.6) [41.5–115] |
| Residual error model | |||
| σ2 (%CV) | Proportional residual error variability | 24 (12.1) [10.2] | 23.6 (12.8) [19.3–29.3] |
The bootstrap estimates are given for comparison. 25 out of 1000 bootstrap runs terminated early
RSE denotes relative standard errors whereas CV coefficient of variation
Fig. 3Relationship between body weight normalized clearance and volume of distribution at steady state versus age, body weight, infusion duration and sex for all patients in the study