Journal Article10.1213/ANE.0000000000000165
A General Purpose Pharmacokinetic Model for Propofol
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TL;DR: A single propofol PK model is developed that performed well for a wide range of patient groups and clinical conditions and is suitable for prospective evaluation.
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Abstract: BACKGROUND: Pharmacokinetic (PK) models are used to predict drug concentrations for infusion regimens for intraoperative displays and to calculate infusion rates in target-controlled infusion systems. For propofol, the PK models available in the literature were mostly developed from particular patient groups or anesthetic techniques, and there is uncertainty of the accuracy of the models under differing patient and clinical conditions. Our goal was to determine a PK model with robust predictive performance for a wide range of patient groups and clinical conditions. METHODS: We aggregated and analyzed 21 previously published propofol datasets containing data from young children, children, adults, elderly, and obese individuals. A 3-compartmental allometric model was estimated with NONMEM software using weight, age, sex, and patient status as covariates. A predictive performance metric focused on intraoperative conditions was devised and used along with the Akaike information criteria to guide model development. RESULTS: The dataset contains 10,927 drug concentration observations from 660 individuals (age range 0.25-88 years; weight range 5.2-160 kg). The final model uses weight, age, sex, and patient versus healthy volunteer as covariates. Parameter estimates for a 35-year, 70-kg male patient were: 9.77, 29.0, 134 L, 1.53, 1.42, and 0.608 L/min for V1, V2, V3, CL, Q2, and Q3, respectively. Predictive performance is better than or similar to that of specialized models, even for the subpopulations on which those models were derived. CONCLUSIONS: We have developed a single propofol PK model that performed well for a wide range of patient groups and clinical conditions. Further prospective evaluation of the model is needed.
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The Influence of Method of Administration and Covariates on the Pharmacokinetics of Propofol in Adult Volunteers
Thomas W. Schnider,Charles F. Minto,Pedro L. Gambús,Corina Andresen,David B. Goodale,Steven L. Shafer,Elizabeth J. Youngs +6 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that method of administration (bolus vs. infusion), but not EDTA, influences the pharmacokinetics of propofol, and within the clinically relevant range, the kinetics of Propofol during infusions are linear regarding infusion rate.
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Measuring the predictive performance of computer-controlled infusion pumps
TL;DR: Four measures are proposed be used to quantitate the performance of CCIPs: median absolute performance error (MDAPE), medianperformance error (MDPE), divergence, and wobble, which offer several significant advantages over previous measures.
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Jürgen Schüttler,Harald Ihmsen +1 more
TL;DR: Adjusting pharmacokinetics to the individual patient should improve the precision of target-controlled infusion and may help to broaden the field of application for target- controlled infusion systems.
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