Fentanyl dosage for preterm infants suggested by a pharmacokinetic, -dynamic, and -genetic model

Maddlie Bardol, Elisabeth Norman, Hugo Lagercrantz, Vineta Fellman, Joseph F. Standing

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Background: Fentanyl is commonly administered for procedural pain management in preterm infants, but target concentrations have not yet been defined. Methods: To investigate pharmacokinetics (PK), -dynamics (PD), and -genetics (PG), 25 infants (gestational age 23.3–34.1 weeks) received a fentanyl dose before a skin-breaking procedure (0.5 µg/kg) or tracheal intubation (2 µg/kg). Four pain scales were used as a PD endpoint to evaluate efficacy. The impact of polymorphism in genes encoding enzymes (UGT2B7, CYP3A7, CYP3A4, COMT, CYP2D6, KCNJ6), transporters (SLC22A1, ABCC1, ABCC3) and receptor (OPRM1) on PK parameters was explored. Results: A two-compartment PK model adequately described the fentanyl concentration. The effects of weight and maturity on the clearance were included as covariates in the model. One genetic variant encoding the ABCC1 transporter (rs111517339 T/TA) and two encoding the ABCC3 transporter (rs11079921 T/C and rs8077268 C/T) had a significant effect on fentanyl elimination that explained 15% of the interindividual variability on the clearance. A proportional odds PK/PD model was used to describe the concentration-effect relationship of fentanyl using the Échelle de douleur et d’inconfort du nouveau-né (EDIN) pain score. Conclusion: The simulations suggest that an intravenous dose of 2 µg/kg would be appropriate in preterm infants for a clearly painful procedure, such as an intubation. Impact: Design of personalized analgesia with fentanyl for newborn infants should consider maturation and genetic variants of opioid transporters affecting drug elimination. The results indicate that an intravenous dose of 2 μg/kg fentanyl would be suitable before a clearly painful procedure in preterm infants. Genetic variants encoding ABCC1 and ABCC3 transporters increase the clearance of fentanyl, which is a novel finding.

Original languageEnglish
JournalPediatric Research
Volume97
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)239-245
Number of pages7
ISSN0031-3998
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2025
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to the International Pediatric Research Foundation, Inc 2024.

Fields of Science

  • 3123 Gynaecology and paediatrics

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