Title: APPLICATIONS OF DEXMEDETOMIDINE IN PEDIATRIC PROCEDURAL SEDATION
1APPLICATIONS OF DEXMEDETOMIDINE IN PEDIATRIC
PROCEDURAL SEDATION
- John Berkenbosch, MD
- Director, University Childrens Sedation Service
Associate Professor - Pediatrics/Pediatric Critical Care
- University of Louisville
- john.berkenbosch_at_louisville.edu
2GOALS
- Understand the pharmacology, physiology, and
clinical properties of dexmedetomidine - Review clinical experience with dexmedetomidine
for pediatric procedural sedation - Adverse Events/Safety Profile
- Coadministrations
- Alternative administration methods
- Discuss practical issues related to use
3BACKGROUND
- Despite recognition of sedation importance, few
agent developments in recent past - Significant issues with some current agents
- Opiate/benzodiazepine tolerance, efficacy
- Chloral hydrate - predictability
- Pentobarbital agitation, duration
- Propofol limited access in some jurisdictions
- Ketamine emergence reactions, tolerance
- ?2-adrenoreceptor agonism
4BACKGROUND?2 RECPTOR AGONISTS
- Prototype agent is clonidine
- More recent applications in clinical practice
- Sedation
- Behavior disorders (ADHD)
- Drug withdrawal
- Hypertension
- Problem hypotension, oral slow
- Solution 2nd generation - ? ?2 specificity
5DEXMEDETOMIDINE
- Precedex, Hospira
- Pharmacologically active D- isomer of
medetomidine - 1st synthesized in late 1980s, Phase 1 studies
in early 1990s, clinical trials late 1990s - 8-fold greater ?2?1 selectivity than clonidine
- 16201 vs 2001
- Shorter elimination half-life than clonidine
- 2-3 vs 8-12 hr
- FDA approved for ICU sedation in adults
- Hopefully pediatric clinical trials soon
6PHARMACOKINETICS
- Intravenous
- Distribution t1/2 6 minutes
- Elimination t1/2 2 hrs
- VDSS 118 liters 94 protein bound
- Intramuscular (2ug/kg)
- Peak plasma conc 1318 min (variable)
- ? 70 bioavailability
- Enteral
- Buccal - ? 80 bioavailability
- Gastric - ? 16-20 bioavailability
7PHARMACOKINETICSPEDIATRIC
- Healthy children
- Bolus (0.33, 0.6, 1.0 ug/kg)
- No different than adult t1/2 1.8 hr, Vd 1.0
L/kg - General post-op population (3 mo-8 yr)
- 8-24 hr infusions 0.2-0.7 ug/kg/hr
- Similar to adults t1/2 2.6 hr, Vd 1.5 L/kg
- Infants/toddlers post CV Sx (1-24 mo)
- T1/2 83 min
- more rapid clearance than adults
8METABOLISM
- Almost 100 biotransformation
- Glucuronidation
- Cytochrome P450 mediated
- Metabolites all inactive urinary elimination
- Significant ? t1/2 in hepatic failure (7.5 hr)
- lt1 excreted as unchanged
- No significant effect of renal impairment
9MECHANISM CLINICAL CNS EFFECTS
- Locus ceruleus
- Brainstem center - modulates wakefulness
- Major site for hypnotic actions (sedation,
anxiolysis) - Mediated via various efferent pathways
- Thalamus and subthalamus ? cortex
- Nociceptive transmission via descending spinal
tracts - Vasomotor center and reticular formation
- Spinal cord
- Binding to ?2 receptors ? analgesia via ? release
of substance P
10 CNS ACTIONS
- Sedation central, G-proteins (inhibition)
- Analgesia spinal cord, Substance P
11MECHANISM CENTRAL ?2
- Presynaptic receptors
- Location
- Sympathetic nerve endings
- Noradrenergic CNS neurons
- Mechanism/action
- Transmembrane receptors
- Coupled to Go- and Gi- type G-proteins
- ? adenylate cyclase and cAMP formation
- Hyperpolarization (K-channels)
- ? Ca conductance ? NE release
12CELLULAR MECHANISM
13NON-CNS EFFECTS
- Hypertension
- peripheral ?1-agonism
- Bradycardia/hypotension
- Sympathetic inhibition - medullary VMC
- ? shivering
- Diuresis
- ? renin, vasopressin ? ANP
14(No Transcript)
15RESPIRATORY EFFECTS
- Promoted as having minimal respiratory depressing
effects - 0.17 incidence on monogram
- Most data suggests SaO2 and PaCO2 unaffected
- Numerous reports during spontaneous ventilation
16RESPIRATORY EFFECTSBelleville JP et al,
Anesthesiology 1992771125
- 37 healthy, male volunteers - 0.25-1 ug/kg over
2 min - SaO2, PaCO2, ETCO2, CO2 response
- Results
- Irregular breathing/obstruction in 1.0, 2.0 ug/kg
groups - Mild ? SaO2, and VE mild ? PaCO2 blunted CO2
response - PARAMETER BASELINE 10 MIN 60 MIN
- SpO2 ( saturation) 98.3 0.8 96.2 1.5 95.4
1.2 - PaCO2 (mmHg) 41.9 2.3 46.1 5.0 45.3 3.5
- Ventilation (l/min) 8.73 0.71 7.14 3.04 6.28
1.53 - VE _at_ PETCO2 55 mmHg 22.50 7.32 13.82 8.01
12.89 3.22
17OR/PERIOPERATIVE OBSERVATIONS
- ? hypotension vs propofol
- Blunted tachycardia during controlled hypotension
- ? ? PACU analgesia requirements
- Blunted catecholamine response
- Potential importance with vascular procedures
- Respiratory - non-intubated
18CLINICAL USE PICU Tobias JD, Berkenbosch JW,
South Med J 200497451
- PRT in 30 ventilated PICU patients
- Crossover (24 hr) comparison dex (0.25, 0.5
ug/kg/hr) vs midazolam (0.1 mg/kg/hr) - Morphine (0.1 mg/kg) prn agitation
- Outcomes sedation quality, adjunct meds
plt0.05 vs. midazolam group p0.08 vs.
midazolam group
19CLINICAL USE PICU Chrysostomou et al, Ped Crit
Care Med 20067126
- Retrospective description of dex use in 38
post-cardiac surgical patients - 5 intubated, 33 spontaneously ventilating
- Used as primary sedative/analgesic agent
- No defined rescue regimen
- Mean infusion rate 0.3 ug/kg/? (0.1-0.75) x 15?5
hrs - No loading dose
- Sedation and analgesia adequate 93 and 83 of
the time - 1.3 rescue boluses/pt, increased in lt1 yr (3.2
boluses/pt) - Hypotension in 6 pts (16), easily managed
- No respiratory events
20CLINICAL USE PICU Buck et al, Pharmacotherapy
2008751
- Prospective, observational series of dex in 17
PICU patients (20 courses) - cardiac surgical (13), medical (3), other surg
(1) - Dose range 0.2-0.7 ug/kg/? x 32?21 hr
- No loading dose
- Primary agent in 15, adjunct in 5 (failed conv)
- periextubation agent in 13 - all successful
- No reported significant cardiovascular events
21ICU OBSERVATIONS
- Limited available data
- Peds doses may be slightly higher, esp infants
- Parent satisfaction high
- Lighter but less agitated
- ?? sedation/recovery-related wooziness
- Appears useful in non-intubated pts
- Effective bridge through extubation
- Not necessarily 1st line
- reserve for difficult, long-term
- Analgesic effects probably not insignificant
22PROCEDURAL SEDATION
- Most recently reported application but more
published information compared with ICU - Expansion developed based on confirmation of
limited resp depression - Nichols DP, et al Pediatr Anaesth 200515199
- Sedation of 5 children failing chloral
hydrate/midazolam - Dex bolus (0.8?0.4 ug/kg) over 10 min, gtt
0.6ug/kg/hr - Procedures completed
- Modest ? HR, BP no significant respiratory
effects
23PROCEDURAL SEDATION Berkenbosch JW, Pediatr
Crit Care Med 20056435
- First reported prospective series
- non-invasive procedures
- Candidates
- gt4 y.o.
- Previous chloral hydrate failure/poor candidate
- Rescue from failed sedation
- Induction bolus 0.5 ug/kg over 5 min
- Maintenance started at 0.5 ug/kg/hr - titrate
- Monitor - Physiologic
- - Effectiveness
- - Recovery-related behavior
24PROCEDURAL SEDATION Berkenbosch JW, Pediatr
Crit Care Med 20056435
- 48 patients, 6.93.7 yrs - 15 rescues
25PROCEDURAL SEDATION Berkenbosch JW, Pediatr
Crit Care Med 20056435
- Modest ? in HR, BP, RR - always normal for age
- ET-CO2 gt50 in 1.7 (max 52 mmHg)
- No recovery-related agitation
26PROCEDURAL SEDATION
- Only 2 comparative trials to date
- Koroglu A, Br J Anaesth 200594821
- Dex vs midazolam for MRI sedation
- 80 patients, 1-7 yrs
- Dex 1ug/kg bolus, then 0.5 ug/kg/hr
- Midazolam 0.2 mg/kg, then 0.36 mg/kg/hr
- Efficacy 32/40 (dex) vs 8/40 (midazolam)
- Onset 19 min (dex) vs 35 min (midazolam)
- Similar CV effects - nothing significant
- Concl dex gt efficacy vs midazolam
- Problem midaz rarely sole agent for MRI
27PROCEDURAL SEDATION
- Koroglu A, Anesth Analg 200610363
- Dex vs propofol for MRI sedation
- 60 patients aged 1-7 yrs
- Dex 1ug/kg bolus, then 0.5 ug/kg/hr
- Propofol 3 mg/kg bolus, then 6 mg/kg/min
- Efficacy similar 83 (dex) vs 90 (propofol)
- Onset 11 min (dex) vs 4 min (propofol)
- ? rec time with dex (27 vs 18 min)
- ? hypoxia with dex (0 vs 13)
- Concl Consider as alternative to propofol
28PROCEDURAL SEDATION
- Preceding series with limited power small n
- Mason K, Pediatr Anaesth 200818393
- Dex for CT scan sedation protocolized
- Bolus 2 ug/kg over 10 min or until RSS 4-5
- maintenance dose 1 ug/kg/hr as needed
- N250 pts, 2.91.9 yrs
- Induction 2.2 0.6 ug/kg over 10.54.2 min
- Recovery - 2716 min
- Modest dec HR (15-30 in 54, gt30 in 20) and BP
(15-30 in 24, gt30 in 7) - No information on interventions
- Most pronounced toward procedure conclusion
29PROCEDURAL SEDATION Mason K et al, Pediatr
Anaesth 200818403
- High dose dex as sole agent for MRI sedation
- Bolus infusion, rescue with pentobarb
- 747 patients over 2 year period
- Progressive increase in doses over time (n3)
- Induction 2?3 ug/kg over 10 min
- Maintenance 1?2 ug/kg/hr
- Success 91.8 (dose 1) vs 97.6 (dose 3)
- Dec pentobarb use 8.2 vs 10.4 vs 2.4
- Modest bradycardia (n120)
- gt20 below NL in 28 (3.7) no intervention
- Mean rec time 34 min vs 72 min with pentobarb
30CLINICAL EXPERIENCE Lubisch N, Berkenbosch JW
(submitted, 2008)
- Dex in patients with neurobehavioral disease
- Many need EEG, MRI but sedation options limited
- Combined databases from 2 Institutions
- Demographics, adjuncts, procedures, efficacy
- Limited by differences between databases
- 315 pts, KCH (n74), CECH (n241)
- Age 6.8 3.9 yrs (8 mo-24 yr)
- 1 Dx autism (83.1)
- 1 procedure MRI (78)
31CLINICAL EXPERIENCE Lubisch N, Berkenbosch JW,
(submitted, 2008)
- Sedation
- Dex alone (n 32), dex midaz (n283)
- Induction - 1.4?0.6 ug/kg,
- Total - 2.7?1.7 ug/kg
- Efficiency Ind - 8.2?4.7 min, rec - 47?27 min
- Adverse
- gt30 ? SBP (n30, 9.6), HR (n64, 20.3)
- Glycopyrollate x4, NS bolus x1
- UAObstr in 1 - nasal trumpet
- Sedation failures (n4, 1.3)
- Recovery-related agitation severe n2 (0.6)
32PSRC EXPERIENCE Berkenbosch JW, Lubisch N, PSRC
(in preparation)
- Major limitation of single Institution studies is
sample size and power. - Pediatric Sedation Research Consortium 37
institution collaborative - July 1, 2004 Data collection begun
- Through 9/2007 90,000 sedation entries
- Database queried from 7/1/2004 9/1/2007 for all
sedations using dexmedetomidine
33PSRC EXPERIENCE Berkenbosch JW, Lubisch N, PSRC
(in preparation)
- 2309 sedations, 7 Institutions
- Age 57?47 mos (median 36 mos)
- 221 (9.6) ?12 mos, 96 (4.2) ?6 mos
- ASA I618, ASA II738, ASA III431 (n1803)
- Co-morbidities in 1038 (47)
- 1? diagnoses
- Neurologic (n1389, 60), Hem-Onc (n328, 14)
- 1? procedures radiology (n2026, 88)
- MRI (1469, 64), CT (460, 20), NM (133, 6)
34PSRC EXPERIENCE Berkenbosch JW, Lubisch N, PSRC
(in preparation)
- Administration Bolus alone n164 (7.1)
- Infusion alone n360 (15.6)
- PO alone n215 (9.3)
- Bolusinfusion n1566 (68)
- Total dose 3.1?2.1 ug/kg
- Adjunct midazolam in 1535 (66.4)
- Analgesic (n42), Sedatives (n107)
- Administration Physician n112 (4.8)
- APRN n1485 (64.3)
- RN n1347 (58.3)
35PSRC EXPERIENCE Berkenbosch JW, Lubisch N, PSRC
(in preparation)
- Conditions produced
- Ideal (2212, 95.7)
- Suboptimal (80, 3.4)
- Failures (n17, 0.7)
- Inadequate (n8)
- Complications (n3)
- Unrelated (n6)
- ? Level of Care (n2, 0.1)
- PICU (n2)
- Underlying Dx (n2)
36PSRC EXPERIENCE Berkenbosch JW, Lubisch N, PSRC
(in preparation)
- Highly effective
- Dex alone 724/729 (99.3)
- Dex Midazolam 1334/1440 (99.6)
- Dex any adjunct 2298/2309 (99.5)
- Adverse events favorable compared to PSRC
- Respiratory 1329 vs 149
- Airway Intervention 1770 vs 189
- Failed sedation 1210 vs 1338
- Availability to/administration by non-physicians
37NON-IV USE ORALZub et al, Pediatr Anesth
2005932
- Dex (vs of midaz) as premed for OR/IV
- Planned IV dex d/t EEG in 9, OR premed in 4
- 7/9 - prior failed attempts with other po
- 13 pts, 8.33 yrs (4-14)
- po dose - 2.60.8ug/kg (1-4.2 ug/kg)
- Undiluted (100 ug/ml), slowly (buccal gtgt gastric)
- Time to IV placement 30-50 min
- Success in all, minimal distress
- ? efficacy, efficiency with 3-4 ug/kg
38NON-IV USE ORALSchmidt et al, Pediatr Anesth
2007667
- Pre-op po midaz vs po clonidine vs TM dex on
post-op pain/anxiety - Midaz 0.5 mg/kg 30 min preop (n22)
- Clonidine 4 ug/kg 90 min preop (n18)
- Dex 1 ug/kg 45 min preop (n20)
- Various elective, ambulatory surgeries
- Anesthetic time 116 min, surgical time 83 min
- Similar recovery/discharge times
- Similar anxiety but ? pain, htn in ?2 agonist grp
39NON-IV USE INTRANASALYuen et al, Anesth Analg
20081715
- DBRCT IN dex vs po midaz for OR premed
- 96 pts, 2-12 yrs old elective minor surgery
- po midaz - 0.5 mg/kg
- IN dex - 0.5 or 1.0 ug/kg (diluted to 0.4 ml/pt)
- Modest resistance to IN admin (5.2)
- No c/o pain/burning with IN
- ? sedation in dex at separation (22/59/75)
- No diff in separation ease, induction behavior
- Trend to dec HR, BP with dex sig in D1 grp
- Paradoxical rxn n9 with midaz, 0 with dex
40COADMINISTRATIONS Tosun et al, J Cardiovasc Vasc
Anesth, 2006
- Dex or propofol ketamine in CHD cath lab
- 44 children with acyanotic CHD 4 mo-16 yr
- Dex/ketamine (n22)
- Induction - 1 ug/kg dex, 1 mg/kg ketamine 10
min - Maint 0.7 ug/kg/hr dex/1 mg/kg/hr ketamine
- Propofol/ketamine (n22)
- Induction - 1 mg/kg prop, 1 mg/kg ketamine (?
time) - Maint 100 ug/kg/min prop/1 mg/kg/hr ketamine
- ? ketamine (2.0 vs 1.3 mg/kg/hr) and rec time (45
vs 20 min) in dex group - Similar changes in HR/BP, minimal resp effects
41COADMINISTRATIONS Mester et al, Am J Therap, 2008
- Dex/ketamine in cath lab case series
- 16 pts with acyanotic CHD
- Ind 1 ug/kg dex, 2 mg/kg ketamine 3 min
- Maint 2?1 ug/kg/hr dex, ketamine 1 mg/kg prn
- No response to cannulation
- Early ? dex dose in 2 d/t HR
- No clinically sig HR/BP changes, no tachycardia
- Mild UAO in 2 reposition no hypercarbia
- Concl good analgesia, minimal CV-resp
- Likely 2 inc dex dose vs prior study (Tosun)
42CONCLUSIONS
- Effective for non-invasive procedures
- Coadmin with analgesics for invasive??
- Dose moderately higher than for ICU sedation
- 2-3 ug/kg/hr well tolerated medium-term
- Lack of recovery-related agitation significant
- Minimal compared to chloral, barbiturates
- Role of adjunct benzodiazepines unclear
- Similar CV, ? resp vs propofol
- ? availability vs propofol in many venues
- Ongoing paucity of comparative reports/trials
43PRACTICAL POINTS
- IV use
- Dilute to 4 ug/ml in 0.9 saline
- Infusion usually req for lengthy procedures
- Use pump for induction bolus 12 ug/kg/hr 1
ug/kg over 5 min - Coadmin with midazolam
- Appears to ? induction time, ? ? rec time
- Buccal/transmucosal
- Use undiluted (100 ug/ml) drug
- Slow drip into oral cavity ?? efficacy,
efficiency by ? swallowing and, therefore,
gastric absorption