Sufentanil
[SH4:p109-p110]
Structure
- Thienyl analogue of fentanyl
Pharmacodynamics
Potency
- Analgesic potency of sufentanil is 5-10 times that of fentanyl
* Reflects the greater affinity for receptors
Effects by systems
CNS
- Decrease in cerebral metabolic oxygen requirment (CMRO2)
- CBF is decreased or unchanged
NB:
- This decrease in CMRO2 is typical of opioids
CVS
- Bradycardia can occur with sufentanil
* May be sufficient to reduce cardiac output
- Large doses of sufentanil (10-30 microgram/kg IV) or fentanyl (50-150 microgram/kg IV)
--> Stable haemodynamics, provided LVF is normal
- Does NOT completely suppress sympathetic response to painful stimulus
NB:
- This CVS stability is similar to fentanyl
- Inability to completely suppress sympathetic response is also similar to fentanyl
Respiratory
- Delayed respiratory depression can occur
* Like fentanyl
Musculoskeletal
- May cause transient skeletal muscle spasm when injected intrathecally (40microgram)
- Ridigity of chest and abdominal muscles can occur with large doses of sufentanil
* Similar to the effect of high-dose fentanyl
* Difficult ventilation during sufentanil-induced muscle rigidity could be due to closure of the vocal cords
Pharmacokinetics
Absorption
Distribution
- Vd = 123 L
- Protein-binding = 93%
* Extensive
* Contribute to the smaller Vd
* Binds to alpha1-acid glycoprotein
- Rapid penetration of BBB due to high lipid-solubility
- Significant first-pass pulmonary uptake
* Approximately 60%
* Less than fentanyl (75%)
* More than morphine (7%) and alfentanil (10%)
Metabolism
- High hepatic extraction ratio (???)
* Due to high lipid solubility
--> Clearance is sensitive to changes in hepatic blood flow
Rapidly metabolised to:
- N-dealkylation at piperidine nitrogen
--> Inactive metabolites
- O-demethylation
--> Desmethyl sufentanil
- Desmethyl sufentanil
--> About 10% of the activity of sufentanil
Elimination
- Clearance = 900 mL/min
- <1% excreted unchanged in urine
* High lipid solubility --> maximal renal tubular reabsorption
- Metabolites are excreted almost equally in urine and faeces
* About 30% appear as conjugates
Action profile
- Effect-site equilibration time = 6.2 min
* Similar to fentanyl (6.8min)
- Elimination half-time = 2.2-4.6 hours
* Between fentanyl (3.1-6.6 hours) and alfentanil (1.4-1.5 hours)
- Context-sensitive half-time (4 hours) = 30 min
Sufentanil vs alfentanil
- Context-sensitive half-time for sufentanil (30min) is less than alfentanil (60min)
* Despite longer elimination half-time of sufentanil (2.2-4.6 hour, vs 1.4-1.5 hours for alfentanil)
--> Partly due to larger Vd of sufentanil
--> More favourable recovery profile
- Alfentanil has faster effect-site equilibration time (1.4min) than sufentanil (6.2min)
--> Easier to titrate than sufentanil
Physicochemical properties
- Weak base
- pKa = 8.0
--> 20% nonionised at pH 7.4
- Partition coefficient (lipid solubility) = 1727
* When morphine = 1
Pharmaceutical
Clinical
Single dose of sufentanil (0.1-0.4 microgram/kg)
--> Longer period of analgesia and less respiratory depression than fentanyl (1-4 microgram/kg)
Greater safety margin
1000-fold dose difference between analgesic dose of sufentanil and the dose that produce seizure in animals
* 160-fold difference for fentanil
Special considerations
Liver cirrhosis
- Elimination half-time of a single IV dose of sufentanil is not changed.
Renal failure
- Renal failure could be associated with prolonged respiratory depression from sufentanil
Elderly
- Elimination half-time is increased in elderly patients (undergoing abdominal aortic surgery)
Neonates and infants
- Decreased level of alpha1-acid glycoprotein in neonates and infants
--> Greater free-drug fraction
--> Increased effect in these age group
Obesity
- Vd and elimination half-time are both increased
* Most likely due to high lipid solubility of sufentanil