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Intranasal Fentanyl for Intervention-Associated Breakthrough Pain After Cardiac Surgery

Authors :
Brian J. Anderson
Merja Kokki
Hannu Kokki
Maisa Laakso
Veli-Pekka Ranta
Antti Valtola
Henriikka Hakomäki
Valtteri Rinne
Source :
Clinical Pharmacokinetics
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Background Cardiac bypass surgery patients have early postoperative interventions that elicit breakthrough pain. We evaluated the use of intranasal fentanyl for breakthrough pain management in these patients. Methods Multimodal analgesia (paracetamol 1 g three times a day, oxycodone 2–3 mg boluses with a patient-controlled intravenous pump) was used in 16 patients (age 49–70 years, weight 59–129 kg) after cardiac bypass surgery. Intranasal fentanyl 100 µg or 200 µg was used to manage breakthrough pain on the first and third postoperative mornings in a randomised order. Blood samples were collected for up to 3 h after fentanyl administration, pain was assessed with a numeric rating scale of 0–10. Plasma fentanyl concentration was assayed using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Body composition was measured with a bioelectrical impedance device. Results Bioavailability of intranasal fentanyl was high (77%), absorption half-time short (< 2 min) and an analgesic plasma concentration ≥ 0.5 ng/mL was achieved in 31 of 32 administrations. Fentanyl exposure correlated inversely with skeletal muscle mass and total body water. Fentanyl analgesia was effective both on the first postoperative morning with chest pleural tube removal and during physiotherapy on the third postoperative morning. The median time of subsequent oxycodone administration was 1.1 h after intranasal fentanyl 100 µg and 2.1 h after intranasal fentanyl 200 µg, despite similar oxycodone concentrations (median 13.8, range 5.2–35 ng/mL) in both fentanyl dose groups. Conclusions Intranasal fentanyl 100 µg provided rapid-onset analgesia within 10 min and is an appropriate starting dose for incidental breakthrough pain in the first 3 postoperative days after cardiac bypass surgery. Clinical Trial Registration EudraCT Number: 2018-001280-22. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40262-021-01002-4.

Details

ISSN :
11791926, 03125963, and 20180012
Volume :
60
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Pharmacokinetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7cd6b9455bdd1e558c8a09d244f70cdf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40262-021-01002-4