Serum lidocaine (lignocaine) concentrations during prolonged perioperative infusion in patients undergoing breast cancer surgery: A secondary analysis of a randomised controlled trial

Author:

Toner Andrew J12ORCID,Bailey Martin A3,Schug Stephan A2,Phillips Michael45,Ungerer Jacobus PJ67,Somogyi Andrew A8ORCID,Corcoran Tomas B129

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine, Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, Australia

2. Medical School, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia

3. Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Taranaki Base Hospital, New Plymouth, New Zealand

4. Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research, Nedlands, Australia

5. Centre for Medical Research, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia

6. Pathology Queensland, Royal Brisbane & Women’s Hospital, Brisbane, Australia

7. School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

8. Discipline of Pharmacology, School of Biomedicine, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia

9. School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia

Abstract

Perioperative lidocaine (lignocaine) infusions are being employed with increasing frequency. The determinants of systemic lidocaine concentrations during prolonged administration are unclear. In the Long-term Outcomes after Lidocaine Infusions for PostOperative Pain (LOLIPOP) pilot trial, the impact of infusion duration and body size metrics on serum lidocaine concentrations was examined with regression models in 48 women undergoing breast cancer surgery. Lidocaine was delivered as an intravenous bolus (1.5 mg/kg) and infusion (2 mg/kg per h) intraoperatively, followed by a 12-h subcutaneous infusion (1.33 mg/kg per h) postoperatively. Dosing was based on total body weight. Wound infiltration with other long-acting local anaesthetics was permitted. Protein binding and pharmacogenomic data were also collected. Lidocaine concentrations (median (interquartile range) (range)) during prolonged administration were in the safe and potentially therapeutic range: post-anaesthesia care unit 2.16 (1.73–2.82) (1.12–6.06) µg/ml; ward 1.41 (1.22–1.75) (0.64–2.81) µg/ml. Concentrations increased non-linearly during the early intravenous phase of administration (mean rise 1.21 µg/ml per hour of infusion, P = 0.007) but reached a pseudo steady-state during the later subcutaneous phase. Higher dose rates received per kilogram of lean ( P = 0.004), adjusted ( P = 0.006) and ideal body weight ( P = 0.009) were associated with higher steady-state concentrations. The lidocaine free fraction was unaffected by the presence of ropivacaine, and phenotypes linked to slow metabolism were infrequent. Serum lidocaine concentrations reached a pseudo steady-state during a 12-h postoperative infusion. Greater precision in steady-state concentrations can be achieved by dosing on lean body weight versus adjusted or ideal body weight (equivalent lean body weight doses: intravenous bolus 2.5 mg/kg; intravenous infusion 3.33 mg/kg per h; subcutaneous infusion 2.22 mg/kg per h.

Funder

Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists

Royal Perth Hospital Medical Research Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

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