Critical care (London, England)

Comparing Remifentanil and Fentanyl for Sedation and Pain Relief in ICU Patients

Updated

Abstract

The mean percentage of time in optimal sedation was 88.3% for remifentanil and 89.3% for fentanyl.

  • Patients receiving remifentanil showed significantly less variability in optimal sedation compared to those receiving fentanyl.
  • 40% of fentanyl patients required additional , compared to 35% of remifentanil patients, with median total doses of 683 mg and 378 mg, respectively.
  • Patients on remifentanil experienced pain for longer durations during extubation, postextubation, and post-treatment compared to those on fentanyl.
  • Median time to extubation was similar for both groups, at 1.1 hours for remifentanil and 1.3 hours for fentanyl.
  • Both remifentanil and fentanyl maintained similar haemodynamic stability with no significant differences in adverse events.

Simplified

Key numbers

88.3%
Optimal Sedation Time
Percentage of time patients were optimally sedated with remifentanil.
6.5%
Pain During Extubation
Percentage of time patients experienced pain during extubation with remifentanil.
1.84
Variance Ratio
Ratio of between-patient variability in sedation levels (fentanyl vs. remifentanil).

Full Text

What this is

  • This study compares remifentanil and fentanyl for sedation and analgesia in ICU patients.
  • Both drugs were evaluated for efficacy and safety in mechanically ventilated patients.
  • Key outcomes included optimal sedation levels, pain incidence, and recovery times.

Essence

  • Remifentanil provided effective sedation with less variability compared to fentanyl, but resulted in a higher incidence of pain during recovery. Both agents were well tolerated.

Key takeaways

  • Remifentanil allowed optimal sedation in 88.3% of the time, comparable to 89.3% for fentanyl, indicating similar efficacy.
  • Patients receiving remifentanil experienced significantly longer pain during extubation (6.5% vs. 1.4%) and postextubation (10.2% vs. 3.6%) compared to those on fentanyl.
  • Remifentanil showed significantly less between-patient variability in optimal sedation (variance ratio of 1.84; P = 0.009), suggesting improved control of patient comfort.

Caveats

  • The study's double-blind design limited the ability to manage pain proactively as patients transitioned to longer-acting analgesics.
  • While recovery times were similar, the rapid offset of remifentanil led to increased pain management requirements, which may complicate its use.

Definitions

  • Sedation-Agitation Scale (SAS): A scoring system used to assess sedation and agitation levels in ICU patients.
  • Propofol: A sedative agent commonly used for anesthesia and sedation in critically ill patients.

Simplified

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