| Literature DB >> 30574300 |
Isabelle Cooper1, Cornelia B Landersdorfer2,3,4, Ashley Gordon St John5, Andis Graudins1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Droperidol is used parenterally to treat nausea and vomiting, migraine and acute behavioural disturbance. Intranasal use is not reported for droperidol. Intranasal drug administration reduces need for intravenous line placement and risk of needle-stick.Entities:
Keywords: Population pharmacokinetics; antipsychotics; droperidol; intranasal; pharmacokinetics
Year: 2018 PMID: 30574300 PMCID: PMC6295742 DOI: 10.1177/2050312118813283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Med ISSN: 2050-3121
Weight-based calculation for intranasal droperidol dosing.
| Weight (kg) | Dose in mg and (diluted drug volume) | Volume administered to each nare |
|---|---|---|
| 50–62.5 | 1 mg (0.4 mL) | One nare |
| 62.6–75 | 1.5 mg (0.6 mL) | 0.30 mL to each nare |
| 75.1–87.5 | 1.7 mg (0.7 mL) | 0.35 mL to each nare |
| 87.6–100 | 2 mg (0.8 mL) | 0.4 mL to each nare |
Droperidol non-compartmental PK parameters.
| Parameter | Units | Median (range) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| IV | IN | ||
| Maximum concentration (Cmax) | μg/L | 26.6[ | 6.5 (2.6–8.0) |
| Time of Cmax (Tmax) | H | 0.25 (0.25–0.25)[ | 0.50 (0.50–1.0) |
| Area under the curve from 0 to 10 h (AUC0–10 h) | μg h/L | 40.0 (36.0–79.6) | 18.7 (8.79–33.4) |
| Area under the curve from 0 h to infinity (AUC0-inf) | μg h/L | 41.4 (37.3–81.1) | 19.2 (9.4–35.6) |
| Bioavailability (F) | % | 41.4 (15.0–58.6) | |
| Clearance (CL) | L/h | 33.8 (17.3–48.5) | |
| Apparent clearance (CL/F) | L/h | 82.7 (47.8–160) | |
| Elimination half-life (T1/2) | H | 2.06 (1.87–2.15) | 2.38 (1.80–2.75) |
IN: intranasal; IV: intravenous.
Concentration at first sampling time point, actual Cmax at the end of administration would have been higher.
First sampling time point, actual Cmax would have occurred at the end of administration.
Figure 1.Visual predictive checks of IV ((a) and (b), on linear and log-scale, respectively) and IN ((c) and (d)) droperidol concentration versus time showing observed data and the 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th and 90th percentiles of the predicted concentrations following an average per subject droperidol dose of 1.53 mg IV and 1.63 mg IN.
Figure 2.Individual (left) and population (right) predicted droperidol concentrations versus observed droperidol concentrations.
Droperidol population PK parameter estimates for the final model incorporating both IN and IV data.
| Parameter | Units | Estimate (SE%) | IIV (%CV) or 5th to 95th percentile (P5–P95) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total body clearance (CL) | L/h | 15.3[ | 29.6% |
| Central volume of distribution (V1) | L | 3.16 (34.3) | 85.5% |
| Peripheral volume of distribution (V2) | L | 16.9 (23.1) | 43.6% |
| Distribution clearance (CLd) | L/h | 9.66 (30.0) | 57% |
| Absorption rate constant (ka) | h–1 | 0.517 (11.5) | 13.1% |
| Rate constant for lag time (klag) | h–1 | 5.18 (27.6) | 47.7% |
| Bioavailability (F) | % | 17.4[ | 11.6–25.3 |
| Terminal half-life (T1/2,β) | h | 2.0 | |
| CL/F for IN dosing | L/h | 87.9[ | |
| V1/F for IN dosing | L | 18.2[ | |
| V2/F for IN dosing | L | 97.1[ | |
| CLd/F for IN dosing | L/h | 55.5[ | |
| CVcp | % | 13.2 | |
| SDcp | μg/L | 0.040 |
IIV: inter-individual variability; CV: coefficient of variation; CVcp: proportional residual error; SDcp: additive residual error; SE%: standard error of the population estimate.
Most likely the CL following IV dosing was underestimated by the population PK analysis due to the relatively late timing of the first sample in the IV arm and therefore F is also likely underestimated.
Calculated as the ratio of the population estimates for CL and F; the CL/F when modelling only the IN data was 84.6 L/h.
Calculated as the ratio of the population estimates for V1 and F; the V1/F when modelling only the IN data was 11.3 L.
Calculated as the ratio of the population estimates for V2 and F; the V2/F when modelling only the IN data was 119 L.
Calculated as the ratio of the population estimates for CLd and F; the CLd/F when modelling only the IN data was 40.8 L/h.
Figure 3.Single dose simulations of IN droperidol administration at 1.5 mg (a), 2.5 mg (b) and 5 mg (c) presenting the median (P50) and the 10th (P10) and 90th (P90) percentiles of the predicted concentrations.
Figure 4.Repeat dose droperidol simulations where 5 mg is administered at time-0 and then a further dose of 5 mg given 5 min (a) and 10 min (b) later. The median (P50) and the 10th (P10) and 90th (P90) percentiles of the predicted concentrations are represented on the figures. Note that the P90 concentration peak in both cases approaches the range seen with IV dosing in this study.
Figure 5.Repeat dose droperidol simulations where 5 mg is administered at time-0 and then a further dose of 5 mg given 30 min (a) and 1 h later (b). The median (P50) and the 10th (P10) and 90th (P90) percentiles of the predicted concentrations are represented on the figures. Note that the P90 concentration peak after the second dose of droperidol, in both cases, approaches the range seen with IV dosing in this study.
Figure 6.Consort diagram for INKDROP cross-over volunteer study determining the pharmacokinetics of intranasal and intravenous droperidol.