Efficacy of Continuous Infusion Ketamine for Analgosedation in the Medical Intensive Care Unit: A Propensity-Weighted Analysis

Author:

Magrum BrookeAnne1ORCID,Elefritz Jessica L.1,Eisinger Greg2,McLaughlin Eric3,Doepker Bruce1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacy, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH, USA

2. Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH, USA

3. Center for Biostatistics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA

Abstract

Background Few randomized controlled trials have evaluated the use of ketamine vs opiate-based analgosedation. Methods A retrospective cohort analysis of 169 mechanically ventilated patients admitted to the medical intensive care unit (MICU) at an academic medical center was conducted to evaluate efficacy of ketamine vs opiate-based analgosedation by comparing the percentage of time within target sedation range. The primary outcome was percentage of time within target sedation range (RASS -1 to +1) within first 72 hours of primary sedation initiation. Secondary outcomes including percentage of time under-sedated, over-sedated, and in coma; use of concomitant analgesic, sedative, and antipsychotic agents; presence of delirium; percentage of CPOT scores at goal; and hemodynamic effects were also evaluated. Results After weighting, the mean percentage of time at RASS goal for ketamine patients was 43.0% compared to 41.4% for opiate-based sedation patients. Ketamine was not significantly non-inferior to opiate-based sedation for the mean percentage of time at RASS goal ( P = .11). The median percentage of CPOT scores at goal was 13.3% higher in the ketamine group ( P = .042). Patients in the ketamine group received significantly less additional sedative agents than the patients in the opiate-based sedation group. Conclusion A similar percent of time at RASS goal was found for the ketamine analgosedation group compared to the opiate-based sedation group, although this did not reach statistical signicance for non-inferiority due to lack of statistical power. This study found a higher percentage of CPOT scores within goal with less additional sedative agents required compared to an opiate-based sedation regimen.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical)

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