Bispectral Index as a Guide for Titration of Propofol During Procedural Sedation Among Children

Objective. To determine whether the bispectral index (BIS) monitor could be used to guide physicians in titrating propofol to an effective safe level of deep sedation for children undergoing painful medical procedures. Design. Multiphase clinical trial. Setting. Outpatient treatment center of a university children's hospital. Patients. Pediatric outpatients undergoing painful medical procedures. Interventions. Patients were sedated with propofol for the procedures. Patients were monitored with a BIS monitor, and the BIS score was correlated with the patient's clinical level of sedation. The BIS score was then used as a guide to titrate propofol in the last phase of the study. Measurements and Main Results. The study consisted of 3 phases. In a chart review of data for 154 children who underwent 212 procedures, propofol was found to be safe and effective, with consistent dosing among the intensivists administering the medication. The children received a mean bolus dose of propofol of 1.56 mg/kg, with a mean total dose of propofol of 0.33 mg/kg per minute for the duration of the procedure. In the second phase, 21 patients ranging in age from 27 weeks to 18 years, with normal neurologic function, were sedated with propofol. An observer who was blinded to the BIS scores recorded clinical levels of sedation and reactivity (with a modified Ramsay scale and reactivity score) every 1 to 3 minutes. Another observer recorded the BIS scores at the same times. A total of 275 data points were collected and evaluated. All data points from the times at which patients were considered to be sedated adequately were used to construct a normal distribution of BIS scores. The mean BIS score was 62. This distribution was used to predict that a maximal BIS score of 47 was needed to ensure adequate sedation for 90% of the population. In the third phase of the study, an algorithm was devised to determine the target BIS score necessary for adequate sedation of 95% of the patients. We chose an initial BIS score of 50 (at which 85% of the patients in phase 2 were sedated) because of the possibility of data from phase 2 being skewed toward oversedation. Propofol was administered by an intensivist in an attempt to maintain the target BIS score. A blinded observer noted the patient's clinical level of sedation. In this group, there were 2 failures, ie, patients were clinically uncomfortable despite a BIS score of ≤50, representing only 90% success. Therefore, with the algorithm, propofol was titrated to sedate the next patients to a BIS score of 45. These patients required a mean bolus dose of 1.47 mg/kg and a mean total dose of 0.51 mg/kg per minute to maintain a BIS score of 45. They awakened in 12.75 minutes. All patients were sedated adequately, all procedures were successful, and no patients experienced complications from the sedation. To eliminate variability in the way propofol was dosed, the next 10 patients were given propofol according to a standardized protocol. These 10 children received an initial bolus of 1 mg/kg, with incremental bolus doses of 0.5 mg/kg per dose (maximum: 20 mg) to achieve and to maintain a BIS score of 45. With this protocol, all patients were sedated adequately and none experienced complications from the sedation. The patients required a mean bolus dose of 2.23 mg/kg and a mean dose of 0.52 mg/kg per minute to maintain a BIS score of 45. The mean time until awakening was 14.9 minutes. Regarding the total dose over time and the time until awakening, there was no statistical significance between this group and the group sedated to a BIS score of 45 without the dosing protocol. Conclusion. The BIS monitor can be a useful monitoring guide for the titration of propofol by physicians who are competent in airway and hemodynamic management, to achieve deep sedation for children undergoing painful procedures.

[1]  D. Wheeler,et al.  The Safe and Effective Use of Propofol Sedation in Children Undergoing Diagnostic and Therapeutic Procedures: Experience in a Pediatric ICU and a Review of the Literature , 2003, Pediatric emergency care.

[2]  G. Olsson,et al.  Propofol or propofol–alfentanil anesthesia for painful procedures in the pediatric oncology ward , 2004, Paediatric anaesthesia.

[3]  A. Kazak,et al.  A randomized controlled prospective outcome study of a psychological and pharmacological intervention protocol for procedural distress in pediatric leukemia. , 1996, Journal of pediatric psychology.

[4]  A. Shad,et al.  Prospective Evaluation of Propofol Anesthesia in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit for Elective Oncology Procedures in Ambulatory and Hospitalized Children , 2000, Pediatrics.

[5]  C. Rosow,et al.  Pediatric Evaluation of the Bispectral Index (BIS) Monitor and Correlation of BIS with End-tidal Sevoflurane Concentration in Infants and Children , 2000, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[6]  M. Schmitz,et al.  Experience With an Anesthesiologist Interventional Model for Endoscopy in a Pediatric Hospital , 2001, Journal of pediatric gastroenterology and nutrition.

[7]  K. Kubal,et al.  Intravenous Anesthesia With Propofol for Painful Procedures in Children With Cancer , 2001, Journal of pediatric hematology/oncology.

[8]  D. Rigler,et al.  Psychologic effects of illness in adolescence. II. Impact of illness in adolescents--crucial issues and coping styles. , 1980, The Journal of pediatrics.

[9]  R. Aneja,et al.  Sedation monitoring of children by the Bispectral Index in the pediatric intensive care unit , 2003, Pediatric critical care medicine : a journal of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.

[10]  R. Hain,et al.  Invasive procedures carried out in conscious children: contrast between North American and European paediatric oncology centres , 2001, Archives of disease in childhood.

[11]  Welcome Guimera,et al.  Practice Guidelines for Sedation and Analgesia by Non- Anesthesiologists , 2005 .

[12]  L. Lowrie,et al.  The pediatric sedation unit: a mechanism for pediatric sedation. , 1998, Pediatrics.

[13]  B. Krauss,et al.  Bispectral index monitoring quantifies depth of sedation during emergency department procedural sedation and analgesia in children. , 2004, Annals of emergency medicine.

[14]  L. D. Martin,et al.  Total intravenous anesthesia with propofol in pediatric patients outside the operating room. , 1992, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[15]  D. Blackhurst,et al.  A comparison of propofol and ketamine/midazolam for intravenous sedation of children , 2001, Pediatric critical care medicine : a journal of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.

[16]  Kathlene E Bassett,et al.  Propofol for procedural sedation in children in the emergency department. , 2003, Annals of emergency medicine.

[17]  A. Vardi,et al.  Is propofol safe for procedural sedation in children? A prospective evaluation of propofol versus ketamine in pediatric critical care* , 2002, Critical care medicine.

[18]  Xikui Wang,et al.  PLAY-THE-WINNER RULE AND ADAPTIVE DESIGNS OF CLINICAL TRIALS , 2001 .

[19]  H. Dalton,et al.  Propofol anesthesia for invasive procedures in ambulatory and hospitalized children: experience in the pediatric intensive care unit. , 1999, Pediatrics.

[20]  A. Sarti,et al.  Deep sedation with propofol by nonanesthesiologists: a prospective pediatric experience. , 2003, Archives of pediatrics & adolescent medicine.

[21]  R. Friesen,et al.  Depth of consciousness and deep sedation attained in children as administered by nonanaesthesiologists in a children's hospital , 2004, Paediatric anaesthesia.

[22]  D. Nelson,et al.  Propofol sedation by emergency physicians for elective pediatric outpatient procedures. , 2003, Annals of emergency medicine.

[23]  P. Sebel,et al.  Pediatric Anesthesia Society for Pediatric Anesthesia Section Editor the Effect of Bispectral Index Monitoring on Anesthetic Use and Recovery in Children Anesthetized with Sevoflurane in Nitrous Oxide , 2022 .

[24]  R. Friesen,et al.  Validation of the Bispectral Index Monitor During Conscious and Deep Sedation in Children , 2003, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[25]  J. Shayevitz,et al.  Deep sedation with propofol for children undergoing ambulatory magnetic resonance imaging of the brain: Experience from a pediatric intensive care unit , 2003, Pediatric critical care medicine : a journal of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.

[26]  R. McDowall,et al.  Total intravenous anesthesia for children undergoing brief diagnostic or therapeutic procedures. , 1995, Journal of clinical anesthesia.

[27]  James F. Arens,et al.  Practice Guidelines for Sedation and Analgesia by Non-Anesthesiologists , 2002, Anesthesiology.

[28]  D. Nelson,et al.  Use of Propofol Sedation in a Pediatric Emergency Department: A Prospective Study , 2001, Clinical pediatrics.