Midazolam infusion and disease severity affect the level of sedation in
children: a parametric time-to-event analysis of data from the ‘daily
sedation interruption in critically ill children’ trial
Abstract
Aim In critically ill mechanically ventilated children, midazolam is
used first line for sedation, however its sedative effects have been
difficult to quantify for which novel quantification methods are still
required. In this analysis, we use parametric time-to-event (PTTE)
analysis to quantify the effects of midazolam in critically ill
children. Methods For the PTTE analysis, data was analyzed from a
published sedation interruption study in mechanically ventilated
critically ill children. In this study, blinded midazolam or placebo
infusions were administered during the sedation interruption phase
until, based on COMFORT-B and NISS scores, patients became undersedated
and unblinded midazolam was restarted. Using NONMEM® v.7.4.3.,the
restart of unblinded midazolam was analysed as a clinical event,
followed by internal and external validation. Results Data contained 138
events from 79 individuals (37 blinded midazolam; 42 blinded placebo).
In the PTTE model, a constant function best described the baseline
hazard. The use of midazolam reduced the hazard for restart of unblinded
midazolam due to undersedation by 51%. In the blinded midazolam group,
time to midazolam restart was 26 h versus 58 h in patients with low
versus high disease severity upon admission (PRISM II <10
versus > 21), respectively. For blinded placebo these times
were 14 h and 33 h, respectively. The model performed well in an
external validation with 42 individuals. Conclusion The PTTE analysis
effectively quantified the effect of midazolam and the influence of
disease severity on sedation in mechanically ventilated critically ill
children and provides a valuable tool to quantify sedative efficacy