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Development of an optimal sampling schedule for children receiving ketamine for short‐term procedural sedation and analgesia
Author(s) -
Sherwin Catherine M.T.,
Stockmann Chris,
Grimsrud Kristin,
Herd David W.,
Anderson Brian J.,
Spigarelli Michael G.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
pediatric anesthesia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.704
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1460-9592
pISSN - 1155-5645
DOI - 10.1111/pan.12521
Subject(s) - ketamine , sedation , medicine , pharmacokinetics , dosing , anesthesia , intravenous bolus , population , sampling (signal processing) , volume of distribution , blood sampling , bolus (digestion) , pharmacology , surgery , environmental health , filter (signal processing) , computer science , computer vision
Summary Background Intravenous racemic ketamine is commonly administered for procedural sedation, although few pharmacokinetic studies have been conducted among children. Moreover, an optimal sampling schedule has not been derived to enable the conduct of pharmacokinetic studies that minimally inconvenience study participants. Methods Concentration‐time data were obtained from 57 children who received 1–1.5 mg·kg −1 of racemic ketamine as an intravenous bolus. A population pharmacokinetic analysis was conducted using nonlinear mixed effects models, and the results were used as inputs to develop a D‐optimal sampling schedule. Results The pharmacokinetics of ketamine were described using a two‐compartment model. The volume of distribution in the central and peripheral compartments were 20.5 l∙70 kg −1 and 220 l∙70 kg −1 , respectively. The intercompartmental clearance and total body clearance were 87.3 and 87.9 l·h −1 ∙70 kg −1 , respectively. Population parameter variability ranged from 34% to 98%. Initially, blood samples were drawn on 3–6 occasions spanning a range of 14–152 min after dosing. Using these data, we determined that four optimal sampling windows occur at 1–5, 5.5–7.5, 10–20, and 90–180 min after dosing. Monte Carlo simulations indicated that these sampling windows produced precise and unbiased ketamine pharmacokinetic parameter estimates. Conclusion An optimal sampling schedule was developed that allowed assessment of the pharmacokinetic parameters of ketamine among children requiring short‐term procedural sedation.