Title: Intranasal Drug Delivery
1Intranasal Drug Delivery Clinical Implications
for Pre-hospital care
2Lecture outline
- Why use intranasal medications?
- Intranasal drug delivery General concepts
- Intranasal drugs indications with clinical cases
and personal insights - Pain Control
- Sedation
- Seizures
- Opiate overdose
- Drug doses
- Resources
3Why do I think nasal drug delivery is important
in prehospital care?
- Efficacy, speed and ease of delivery
- No delivery delays (no IV)
- Can deliver to anyone with an exposed nose
- Rapid onset of action (Pain control, Sedation,
seizure, overdose) - As effective and fast as IV drugs in most
situations - Safety
- No needle stick risk
- Lower risk of respiratory depression (compared to
IV) - Easier to proceed with additional care
- Start IV in children or agitated adult
- Calm the agitated patient
4Understanding IN delivery General principles
- First pass metabolism
- Nose brain pathway
- Bioavailability / Drug absorption
- Safety vs IV drugs
5First pass metabolism
Nasal Mucosa No first pass metabolism
Gut mucosa Subject to first pass metabolism
6Nose brain pathway
Olfactory mucosa, nerve
- The olfactory mucosa (smelling area in nose) is
in direct contact with the brain and CSF. - Medications absorbed across the olfactory mucosa
directly enter the CSF. - Offers a rapid, direct route for drug delivery to
the brain (skipping the blood brain barrier).
Brain CSF
Highly vascular nasal mucosa
7Nose brain pathway
8Bioavailability/ Drug absorption
- How much of the administered medication actually
ends up in the blood stream. - Examples
- IV medications are 100 bioavailable.
- Most oral medications are about 5-10
bioavailable due to destruction in the gut and
liver. - Nasal medications vary depending on molecule, pH,
etc - Midazolam 75
- Fentanyl and Sufentanil 80
- Naloxone 90
- Lorazepam, ketamine, Romazicon, etc
9Optimizing Bioavailability of IN drugs
Critical Concept
- Minimize volume - Maximize concentration
- 0.2 to 0.3 ml per nostril ideal, 1 ml is maximum
- Most potent (highly concentrated) drug should be
used - Maximize total absorptive mucosal surface area
- Use BOTH nostrils (doubles your absorptive
surface area) - Use a delivery system that maximizes mucosal
coverage and minimizes run-off. - Atomized particles across broad surface area
- Beware of abnormal nasal mucosal characteristics
- Mucous, blood and vasoconstrictors may reduce
absorption - Suction nose or consider alternate delivery route
if present
10Dropper vs Atomizer
- Absorption
- Drops runs down to pharynx and swallowed
- Atomizer sticks to broad mucosal surface and
absorbs - Usability / acceptance
- Drops Minutes to give, cooperative patient,
head position required - Atomizer seconds to deliver, better accepted
11Dropper vs Atomizer
Merkus 2006
12Safety of Nasal drugs
13Safety and onset of Nasal drugs
14Intranasal Medications
What IN medications can we use in Prehospital
care?
15Nasal Drug Delivery What Medications?
- Pain control Opiates, other
- Fentanyl, ketamine?
- Sedation- Benzodiazepines
- Midazolam, lorazepam
- Seizure Therapy Benzodiazepines
- Midazolam, lorazepam
- Opiate overdose - Naloxone
16Intranasal Medication Cases
Pain Control
17Case MVC pinned in car
- A 35 year old male pinned in a car following an
MVC. Bilateral upper arm fractures, femur
fracture, likely other injuries. Screaming in
pain. - Clinical Needs Pain control, sedation, rapid
extraction, then IV access (cannot do so now). - Treatment 1.5 mcg/kg of intranasal fentanyl plus
5 mg IN midazolam - In 7 minutes his pain is much better controlled
and he is calmer - Extraction requires 20 minutes, then full trauma
assessment and care proceeds.
18Case Pediatric Hand burn
- A 5 year old burned her hand on the stove
- Clinical Needs Pain control, Transport for wound
care - Treatment 2.0 mcg/kg of intranasal fentanyl (40
mcg 0.8 ml of generic IV fentanyl) - Within 3-5 minutes her pain is improved
- She is transported to a nearby medical facility
- 15 minutes later the patient easily tolerates
cleansing of the burn and dressing application.
19Literature to support these cases - pediatrics
Nasal
Intravenous
Borland, Ann Emerg Med 2007
20Pain control Literature support
- Over a decade of prehospital and ER literature
exists for burn, orthopedic trauma and visceral
pain in both adults and children showing the
following - Faster drug delivery (no IV start needed) so
faster onset - Equivalent to IV morphine
- Superior to IM morphine
- Care givers are more likely to treat pediatric
severe pain - Highly satisfied patients and providers
- Safe
21Pain control Literature support
- Prehospital and wounded soldier literature
- Rickard 07 (MAD) IN fentanyl equal to IV
morphine for pain control in adults. No IV
needed. - McLean 09 (MAD) IN fentanyl very effective for
adult ski trauma victims with onset of action on
less than 5 minutes - Johnstone 09 (MAD) IN fentanyl in ambulance is
very effective for visceral non-traumatic pain
in adults. - U.S. Military Ketamine 50 mg IN is as
good/better than morphine 7.5 mg IV for acute
pain and the soldier can self administer and
potentially continue his mission.
22Intranasal Ketamine for pain ? Literature support
- US Army IN ketamine data
- Compared IN ketamine to IV morphine for severe
pain - IN ketamine (50 mg) as fast and as good as IV
morphine (7.5 mg) w/o side effects.
23The Doubters Surely IN drugs cant be as good as
an injection for pain control!
Nasal
Intravenous
- ACTUALLY They are equivalent or better (in
these settings) - Borland 2007 IN fentanyl onset of action and
quality of pain control was identical to IV
morphine in patients with broken legs and arms - Borland 2008, Holdgate 2010, Crellin 2010 - time
to delivery of IN opiates was half that of IV and
more patients get treated - Kendal 2001 IN opiate superior to IM opiate for
pain control - Conclusions
- IN opiates are just as good as IV
- IN opiates are delivered in half the waiting time
as IV - IN opiate are preferred by patients, providers
and parents over injections
24IN opiates for Pain control My insights
- I use nasal opiates in my practice - daily.
- Our statewide ambulance services IN fentanyl is
the first line pain treatment in all children,
adult option. ?Nasal ketamine soon? - Generic concentrations available in U.S. work
fine and are - inexpensive (1-4/vial)
- Efficacy Very effective and it can be
titrated. -
- Segway to IV therapy in the appropriate
situation (fear, agitation)
25Intranasal Medication Cases
Sedation
26Case Excited Delirium
- A 27-year old male is apprehended by police and
paramedics for extremely violent, out of control
behavior following use of crystal meth. - He is at significant risk of injuring himself and
others. - It is too dangerous (needle stick risk) to give
him an injection of sedatives. - The paramedic administers 10 mg of IN midazolam
and 7 minutes later he is calm and can be
transported safely to the hospital.
27Sedation Literature support
- Hundreds of articles dating back into the 1980s.
Most used midazolam. - Effective only if adequate dose is given (0.4 to
0.5 mg/kg in kids, 10 mg straight dose in adults) - Effective in children and adults (even exited
delirium in EMS) - Safe no reports of respiratory depression
28IN Benzos for sedation my insights
- The EMS literature is just emerging Many cases
reported, few good actual studies - Timing Sedation onset with midazolam at about
5-10 minutes, maximal at 10-20 and starts to wear
off at 25-30. - Efficacy Sedation is not deep but it takes the
edge off and can make further care less stressful
or dangerous - Lorazepam? More data needs to be obtained for
lorazepam. My experience lasts longer, 75
effective. - Ketamine? Mixed results, doses of at least 5
mg/kg needed, more data needs to be obtained in
prehospital and ER environment before conclusions
can be made.
29Intranasal Medication Cases
Seizure Control
30Case Seizing child
- The ambulance is transporting a 13 y.o. girl
suffering a grand mal seizure. - Despite trying, no IV can be successfully
established. - Rectal diazepam is unsuccessful at controlling
the seizure. - IV attempts in the clinic / hospital are also
unsuccessful. - However, on patient arrival a dose of nasal
midazolam (Versed, Dormicum) is given and within
3 minutes of drug delivery the child stops
seizing.
31Seizure Therapy - Literature support
- Lahat 2000 Fisgin 2002 Holsti 2006 Ahmad 2006
Arya 2011 Holsti 2011 Javadzadeh 2012 Thakker
2012 - IN midazolam is superior to rectal diazepam for
seizure control and is preferred by care givers - IN midazolam is superior to intramuscular
injection of paraldehyde - IN midazolam/lorazepam is equivalent to
intravenous delivery for stopping seizures, much
faster at stopping them due to no IV start needed
and it leads to less respiratory depression and
less need for airway management that either IV or
rectal drugs - IN midazolam can be delivered by family at home
safely and effectively
32Onset of nasal vs buccal seizure drugs(Time of
onset matters)
Anderson 2011 IN vs buccal lorazepam
33Seizure Therapy - expenses
- Cost Average wholesale price
- Rectal diazepam
- (Diastat brand name)
- 10 mg 120/dose
- IN midazolam
- 10 mg 3.20
34The Doubters Surely IN drugs cant be as good as
IV for seizures!
- ACTUALLY They are equivalent or better (in
these settings) - Lahat 00, Mahmoudian 04, Arya 11, Thakker 12,
Javadzadeh 12 IV and IN are equivalent for
stopping seizures rapidly, but IN works faster
due to no delays - Holsti 2007, Fisgin 2002 IN is superior to
rectal - Holsti 2011 IN is safe at home with immediate
results - Conclusions
- IN seizure medication are just as good as IV,
better than rectal - IN seizure medication are delivered much more
rapidly so seizure stops sooner. - Anyone (Parents, care givers, nursing home staff,
ambulance driver, etc.) can administer the
medication so seizure length is shorter.
35IN benzodiazepines for seizures My insights
- Very effective, very fast Rapid seizure
resolution without IV access. - Should be first line therapy in ALL prolonged
acute seizures while IV access is being
established (if at all) - Effective and safe at home, in prehospital
setting, in hospital - More effective, less expensive and preferred by
providers when compared to alternative (rectal
diazepam).
36Intranasal Medication Cases
Opiate Overdose
37Case Heroin Overdose
- The ambulance responds to an unconscious, barely
breathing patient with obvious intravenous drug
needle marks on both arms consistent with
heroin overdose - After an IV is established, naloxone (Narcan?) is
administered and the patient is successfully
resuscitated. - Unfortunately, the medic suffers a contaminated
needle stick while establishing the IV. - The patient admits to being infected with both
HIV and hepatitis C. He remains alert for 2 hours
with no further therapy in the ED (i.e.- no need
for an IV) and is discharged.
38Case Heroin Overdose
- The medic now needs treatment - HIV prophylaxis
- The next few months will be difficult for him
- Side effects that accompany HIV medications
- Personal life is in turmoil due to issues of safe
sex with his spouse - Mental anguish of waiting to see if he develops
HIV or hepatitis C. - He wonders why his system is not using MAD nasal
to deliver naloxone on all these patients.
39Case Methadone induced coma
- A mother enters her daughters room to find her
unconscious, barely breathing, blue color. Since
her daughter is on methadone maintenance, the
family was trained to deliver rescue naloxone
(see photo of kit above). - The mother quickly delivers the naloxone
intranasally. - She provides 2-3 minutes of rescue breathing
until her daughter begins to arouse. She
gradually awakens over 10 minutes. - The patient is transferred to the emergency room
for observation due to the long half life of
naloxone, but makes an uneventful recovery.
40Opiate overdose Literature support
- Intranasal naloxone literature
- Barton 02, 05 Kelly 05 Robertson 09 Kerr 09
Merlin 2010 Doe Simkins 09 Walley 12 - IN naloxone is at least 80-90 effective at
reversing opiate overdose - When compared directly it is equivalent in time
of onset and in efficacy to IV or IM therapy. - IN naloxone results in less agitation upon
arousal - IN naloxone is lay person approved in many
places. It is safe, has saved many lives and
reduces medical resource consumption
41IN naloxone for opiate overdose my insights
- Why not? Is there a downside?
- High risk population for HIV, HCV, HBV
- Difficult IV to establish due to scarring of
veins - Elimination of needle eliminates needle stick
risk - They awaken more gently than with IV naloxone
- New epidemiology shows prescription drugs
(methadone, etc) are causing many deaths that
naloxone at home could reverse. - Simple enough that lay public can administer and
not even call ambulance - Every ambulance system, police agency and many
clinics and families with high risk patients
should be utilizing this approach.
42Drug doses
Scenario Drug and Dose Important Reminders
Pain Control Fentanyl 2 mcg/kg ? Ketamine 1 mg/kg Titration is possible Half up each nostril
Sedation Midazolam 0.5 mg/kg Use concentrated formula
Seizures Midazolam 0.2 mg/kg Lorazepam 0.1 mg/kg Support breathing while waiting Use concentrated formula
Opiate Overdose Naloxone 2 mg Support breathing while waiting
43Intranasal medications summary
- Another tool for drug delivery to supplement
standard IV, IM, POvery useful when appropriate - Supported by extensive literature
- Inexpensive
- Speeds up care in many situations
- Safe
44Questions?
- Educational Web site
- www.intranasal.net