Pharmacokinetic models for propofol--defining and illuminating the devil in the detail
- PMID: 19520702
- DOI: 10.1093/bja/aep143
Pharmacokinetic models for propofol--defining and illuminating the devil in the detail
Erratum in
- Br J Anaesth. 2010 Mar;104(3):393
Abstract
The recently introduced open-target-controlled infusion (TCI) systems can be programmed with any pharmacokinetic model, and allow either plasma- or effect-site targeting. With effect-site targeting the goal is to achieve a user-defined target effect-site concentration as rapidly as possible, by manipulating the plasma concentration around the target. Currently systems are pre-programmed with the Marsh and Schnider pharmacokinetic models for propofol. The former is an adapted version of the Gepts model, in which the rate constants are fixed, whereas compartment volumes and clearances are weight proportional. The Schnider model was developed during combined pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modelling studies. It has fixed values for V1, V3, k(13), and k(31), adjusts V2, k(12), and k(21) for age, and adjusts k(10) according to total weight, lean body mass (LBM), and height. In plasma targeting mode, the small, fixed V1 results in very small initial doses on starting the system or on increasing the target concentration in comparison with the Marsh model. The Schnider model should thus always be used in effect-site targeting mode, in which larger initial doses are administered, albeit still smaller than for the Marsh model. Users of the Schnider model should be aware that in the morbidly obese the LBM equation can generate paradoxical values resulting in excessive increases in maintenance infusion rates. Finally, the two currently available open TCI systems implement different methods of effect-site targeting for the Schnider model, and in a small subset of patients the induction doses generated by the two methods can differ significantly.
Comment in
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Pharmacokinetic models for propofol: defining and illuminating the devil in the detail.Br J Anaesth. 2010 Feb;104(2):261-2; author reply 262-4. doi: 10.1093/bja/aep385. Br J Anaesth. 2010. PMID: 20086066 No abstract available.
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