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By measuring plasmatic concentration of propofol at different intervals during surgery of children aged 1 to 12 years old and measuring Bispectral Index (BIS) as a surrogate for cerebral activity, the investigators aim to create a pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic model of propofol for children.
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Propofol is an intravenous anesthetic capable of providing a safe general anesthesia, free from many of the adverse effects associated with inhalation anesthetics (postoperative nausea and vomiting, agitation on awakening, seizures and trigger malignant hyperthermia crisis) and widely used in adults, but even less so in children. This is due to the fact that its pharmacological characteristics have not been clarified at all in the pediatric population.
The physiological maturation of different systems in children, as well as changes in body composition and metabolism may determine significant changes in the pharmacokinetics (distribution volumes and clearance) of children. Moreover, within the same age group, variations across different individuals may make even less predictable the pharmacokinetic models currently in use. Indeed, previous work in our group based on these models have shown that propofol dosage required by children to induce general anesthesia is inversely proportional to the age, which could be explained by biases in these models, different sensitivity to propofol at different ages and sizes, etc.
The effect of propofol in the brain is described by its pharmacodynamics, but in children this is still in debate. Using a brain activity monitor (BIS), the effect of propofol at the central nervous system can be analyzed under a model of nonlinear mixed effects (NONMEM) and establish the time to peak effect to characterize in detail the pharmacodynamics of this drug.
Integrating pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data, a pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) model for the pediatric population can be derived.
The aim of this paper is to describe the first PK / PD model of propofol in children, valid for different ages and to analyze them in the context of different body composition parameters.
The importance of this study is that its results will publish the missing link in the pediatric pharmacology of propofol, which will encourage more research and more widespread use of this technique in the pediatric population.
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40 participants in 3 patient groups
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Ricardo Fuentes, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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