Pharmacokinetic pharmacodynamic modeling of analgesics and sedatives in children.
Maddlie BardolShan PanSuellen M WalkerJoseph F StandingJoy M DawesPublished in: Paediatric anaesthesia (2023)
Pharmacokinetic pharmacodynamic modeling is an important tool which uses statistical methodology to provide a better understanding of the relationship between concentration and effect of drugs such as analgesics and sedatives. Pharmacokinetic pharmacodynamic models also describe between-subject variability that allows identification of subgroups and dose adjustment for optimal pain management in individual patients. This approach is particularly useful in the pediatric population, where most drugs have received limited evaluation and dosing is extrapolated from adult practice. In children, the covariates of weight and age are used to describe size- and maturation-related changes in pharmacokinetics. It is important to consider both size and maturation in order to develop an accurate model and determine the optimal dose for different age groups. An adequate assessment of analgesic and sedative effect using pain scales or brain activity measures is essential to build reliable pharmacokinetic pharmacodynamic models. This is often challenging in children due to the multidimensional nature of pain and the limited sensitivity and specificity of some measurement tools. This review provides a summary of the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic methodology used to describe the dose-concentration-effect relationship of analgesics and sedation in children, with a focus on the different pharmacodynamic endpoints and the challenges of pharmacodynamic modeling.
Keyphrases
- pain management
- young adults
- chronic pain
- end stage renal disease
- primary care
- neuropathic pain
- chronic kidney disease
- body mass index
- newly diagnosed
- intensive care unit
- spinal cord
- weight gain
- postoperative pain
- quality improvement
- patient reported outcomes
- childhood cancer
- high resolution
- drug induced
- mass spectrometry