Exploring the Relationship Between Morphine Concentration and Oversedation in Children After Cardiac Surgery

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Abstract

Titrating analgesic and sedative drugs in pediatric intensive care remains a challenge for caregivers due to the lack of pharmacodynamic knowledge in this population. The aim of the current study is to explore the concentration-effect relationship for morphine-associated oversedation after cardiac surgery in children aged 3 months to 3 years. Data on morphine dosing, as well as morphine plasma concentrations, were available from a previous study on the pharmacokinetics of morphine after cardiac surgery in children. Oversedation was defined as scores below 11 on the validated COMFORT–behavioral scale. Population pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modeling was performed in NONMEM 7.3. The probability of oversedation as a function of morphine concentration was best described using a step function in which the EC50 was 46.3 ng/mL. At morphine concentrations below the EC50, the probability of oversedation was 2.9% (0.4& to 18%), whereas above the EC50 percentages were 13% (1.9% to 52%) (median value [95% prediction interval from interindividual variability]). Additionally, the risk of oversedation was found to be increased during the first hours after surgery (P

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Valkenburg, A. J., Goulooze, S. C., Ng, C. Y., Breatnach, C. V., Tibboel, D., van Dijk, M., … Krekels, E. H. J. (2020). Exploring the Relationship Between Morphine Concentration and Oversedation in Children After Cardiac Surgery. Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 60(9), 1231–1236. https://doi.org/10.1002/jcph.1620

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