Tags

Type your tag names separated by a space and hit enter

Ketamine Pharmacokinetics.
Anesthesiology. 2020 Dec 01; 133(6):1192-1213.A

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Several models describing the pharmacokinetics of ketamine are published with differences in model structure and complexity. A systematic review of the literature was performed, as well as a meta-analysis of pharmacokinetic data and construction of a pharmacokinetic model from raw data sets to qualitatively and quantitatively evaluate existing ketamine pharmacokinetic models and construct a general ketamine pharmacokinetic model.

METHODS

Extracted pharmacokinetic parameters from the literature (volume of distribution and clearance) were standardized to allow comparison among studies. A meta-analysis was performed on studies that performed a mixed-effect analysis to calculate weighted mean parameter values and a meta-regression analysis to determine the influence of covariates on parameter values. A pharmacokinetic population model derived from a subset of raw data sets was constructed and compared with the meta-analytical analysis.

RESULTS

The meta-analysis was performed on 18 studies (11 conducted in healthy adults, 3 in adult patients, and 5 in pediatric patients). Weighted mean volume of distribution was 252 l/70 kg (95% CI, 200 to 304 l/70 kg). Weighted mean clearance was 79 l/h (at 70 kg; 95% CI, 69 to 90 l/h at 70 kg). No effect of covariates was observed; simulations showed that models based on venous sampling showed substantially higher context-sensitive half-times than those based on arterial sampling. The pharmacokinetic model created from 14 raw data sets consisted of one central arterial compartment with two peripheral compartments linked to two venous delay compartments. Simulations showed that the output of the raw data pharmacokinetic analysis and the meta-analysis were comparable.

CONCLUSIONS

A meta-analytical analysis of ketamine pharmacokinetics was successfully completed despite large heterogeneity in study characteristics. Differences in output of the meta-analytical approach and a combined analysis of 14 raw data sets were small, indicative that the meta-analytical approach gives a clinically applicable approximation of ketamine population parameter estimates and may be used when no raw data sets are available.

Authors

No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Meta-Analysis
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Systematic Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

32997732

Citation

Kamp, Jasper, et al. "Ketamine Pharmacokinetics." Anesthesiology, vol. 133, no. 6, 2020, pp. 1192-1213.
Kamp J, Olofsen E, Henthorn TK, et al. Ketamine Pharmacokinetics. Anesthesiology. 2020;133(6):1192-1213.
Kamp, J., Olofsen, E., Henthorn, T. K., van Velzen, M., Niesters, M., & Dahan, A. (2020). Ketamine Pharmacokinetics. Anesthesiology, 133(6), 1192-1213. https://doi.org/10.1097/ALN.0000000000003577
Kamp J, et al. Ketamine Pharmacokinetics. Anesthesiology. 2020 Dec 1;133(6):1192-1213. PubMed PMID: 32997732.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Ketamine Pharmacokinetics. AU - Kamp,Jasper, AU - Olofsen,Erik, AU - Henthorn,Thomas K, AU - van Velzen,Monique, AU - Niesters,Marieke, AU - Dahan,Albert, AU - ,, PY - 2020/10/1/pubmed PY - 2020/12/15/medline PY - 2020/9/30/entrez SP - 1192 EP - 1213 JF - Anesthesiology JO - Anesthesiology VL - 133 IS - 6 N2 - BACKGROUND: Several models describing the pharmacokinetics of ketamine are published with differences in model structure and complexity. A systematic review of the literature was performed, as well as a meta-analysis of pharmacokinetic data and construction of a pharmacokinetic model from raw data sets to qualitatively and quantitatively evaluate existing ketamine pharmacokinetic models and construct a general ketamine pharmacokinetic model. METHODS: Extracted pharmacokinetic parameters from the literature (volume of distribution and clearance) were standardized to allow comparison among studies. A meta-analysis was performed on studies that performed a mixed-effect analysis to calculate weighted mean parameter values and a meta-regression analysis to determine the influence of covariates on parameter values. A pharmacokinetic population model derived from a subset of raw data sets was constructed and compared with the meta-analytical analysis. RESULTS: The meta-analysis was performed on 18 studies (11 conducted in healthy adults, 3 in adult patients, and 5 in pediatric patients). Weighted mean volume of distribution was 252 l/70 kg (95% CI, 200 to 304 l/70 kg). Weighted mean clearance was 79 l/h (at 70 kg; 95% CI, 69 to 90 l/h at 70 kg). No effect of covariates was observed; simulations showed that models based on venous sampling showed substantially higher context-sensitive half-times than those based on arterial sampling. The pharmacokinetic model created from 14 raw data sets consisted of one central arterial compartment with two peripheral compartments linked to two venous delay compartments. Simulations showed that the output of the raw data pharmacokinetic analysis and the meta-analysis were comparable. CONCLUSIONS: A meta-analytical analysis of ketamine pharmacokinetics was successfully completed despite large heterogeneity in study characteristics. Differences in output of the meta-analytical approach and a combined analysis of 14 raw data sets were small, indicative that the meta-analytical approach gives a clinically applicable approximation of ketamine population parameter estimates and may be used when no raw data sets are available. SN - 1528-1175 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/32997732/Ketamine_Pharmacokinetics_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -