The Well-being Model

Author:

Zanderigo Eleonora1,Sartori Valentina1,Sveticic Gorazd2,Bouillon Thomas3,Schumacher Peter4,Morari Manfred5,Curatolo Michele6

Affiliation:

1. Research Assistant.

2. Resident.

3. Staff Anesthesiologist.

4. Research Engineer, Department of Anesthesiology.

5. Professor and Head, Automatic Control Laboratory, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology.

6. Professor and Head, Division of Pain Therapy, Department of Anesthesiology, University Hospital, Bern, Switzerland.

Abstract

Background Drugs are routinely combined in anesthesia and pain management to obtain an enhancement of the desired effects. However, a parallel enhancement of the undesired effects might take place as well, resulting in a limited therapeutic usefulness. Therefore, when addressing the question of optimal drug combinations, side effects must be taken into account. Methods By extension of a previously published interaction model, the authors propose a method to study drug interactions considering also their side effects. A general outcome parameter identified as patient's well-being is defined by superposition of positive and negative effects. Well-being response surfaces are computed and analyzed for varying drugs pharmacodynamics and interaction types. In particular, the existence of multiple maxima and of optimal drug combinations is investigated for the combination of two drugs. Results Both drug pharmacodynamics and interaction type affect the well-being surface and the deriving optimal combinations. The effect of the interaction parameters can be explained in terms of synergy and antagonism and remains unchanged for varying pharmacodynamics. For all simulations performed for the combination of two drugs, the presence of more than one maximum was never observed. Conclusions The model is consistent with clinical knowledge and supports previously published experimental results on optimal drug combinations. This new framework improves understanding of the characteristics of drug combinations used in clinical practice and can be used in clinical research to identify optimal drug dosing.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference10 articles.

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