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Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of the study will help us understand the complex interaction between hypothermia (cooling) and pharmacogenetics (how specific genes effect how drugs are handled), and their impact on how routinely given sedation drug are broken down and used by the body when given to children after cardiac arrest (when heart stops pumping blood) and are critically ill.


Clinical Trial Description

Background: Therapeutic hypothermia is used in the pediatric intensive care unit, and is being studied in the setting of pediatric cardiac arrest. Following cardiac arrest, multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, especially renal and hepatic dysfunction, is common and affects the metabolism and excretion of drugs. In addition, very little is known about the impact of hypothermia on a child's ability to metabolize medications. Dose adjustments may be required in the setting of hypothermia to avoid under-dosing and over-dosing of medications. Improper dosing and drug accumulation of sedatives and opiates can worsen existing neurologic, circulatory and respiratory failure. The measurement of the actual drug and metabolite concentrations in the body (pharmacokinetics) provides information on how a child metabolizes medications. In addition, variability in these concentrations after the administration of equal doses to different children may result from genetically driven differences in drug metabolizing systems (pharmacogenetics). Finally, these genetic differences may respond differently to hypothermia. Our overarching hypothesis is that morphine and midazolam disposition will be affected by temperature management even when accounting for potentially confounding quantifiable factors of organ dysfunction and genetic differences. Objectives: The objectives of this study, Hypothermia's Impact on Pharmacology 2, are 1. To estimate the impact of hypothermia on the variability in morphine and midazolam pharmacokinetics in children after cardiac arrest and 2. To estimate the impact of genetic factors on the variability in morphine and midazolam pharmacokinetics, specifically in the setting of hypothermia. Sophisticated modeling and simulation techniques will be utilized to examine the highly dynamic changes in physiology associated with critical illness, drug disposition, pharmacogenetics and temperature modulation. The models created using this approach will be implemented to optimize the prospective treatment of these critically ill children. Study Design: Prospective pharmacokinetic study ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01560338
Study type Observational
Source Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date March 2012
Completion date January 28, 2018

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