Determination of Cerebral Nimodipine Concentrations Following Oral, Intra-venous and Intra-arterial Administration - a Descriptive Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamics Study

Status: Recruiting
Location: See location...
Intervention Type: Drug
Study Type: Observational
SUMMARY

Nimodipine reduces the risk of poor outcome and delayed cerebral ischemia in patients suffering aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH), but its mode of action is unknown. Its beneficial effect is assumed to be due its neuroprotective effects by reducing intracellular calcium and thereby cellular apoptosis, but higher concentrations might induce marked systemic hypotension, thereby inducing cerebral ischemia. Since several dosing regimes and routes of administration with inconclusive superiority exist and since the target site concentration of nimodipine - the unbound drug concentrations beyond the blood-brain barrier - is still not known, it is reasonable to measure nimodipine concentrations within the blood, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and interstitial brain tissue following oral, intra-venous and intra-arterial administration and correlate intra-arterial nimodipine administration to measures of cerebral metabolism and oxygenation. Therefore, the investigators propose to investigate in 30 patients suffering severe aneurysmal SAH and requiring cerebral microdialysis for cerebral neurochemical monitoring: * the ability of nimodipine to penetrate into the brain of neurointensive care patients by comparing exposure in brain, CSF and plasma, dependent on the route of administration (i.e. oral, intra-venous, and intra-arterial) and dosing intra-venously (0.5 - 2mg/h) * the impact of orally, intra-venously, and intra-arterially delivered nimodipine on cerebral metabolism, i.e. lactate/pyruvate ratio, pbtO2 and transcranial doppler flow velocities * the effect of oral and intra-venous nimodipine on systemic hemodynamic and cardiac parameters, using continuous Pulse Contour Cardiac Output (PiCCO) monitoring * the penetration properties of ethanol - as an excipient of nimodipine infusion - into the brain by comparing exposure in brain, CSF and plasma and quantifying the neuronal exposure to alcohol dependent on blood levels

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Maximum Age: 95
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

• patient age \> 18 years

• aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage

• sedated and mechanically ventilated

• application of brain microdialysis as standard care (due to the severity of subarachnoid haemorrhage or secondary deterioration)

• oral, intra-venous or intra-arterial administration of nimodipine due to clinical indication

Locations
Other Locations
Austria
Medical University of Vienna
RECRUITING
Vienna
Contact Information
Primary
Arthur Hosmann, MD PhD
arthur.hosmann@meduniwien.ac.at
+43/1/40400
Time Frame
Start Date: 2020-11-25
Estimated Completion Date: 2025-12-31
Participants
Target number of participants: 30
Treatments
oral nimodipine
60mg of nimodipine is orally administered every 4 h,
intra-venous nimodipine
nimodipine is continuously administered intra-venously, starting with 0.5 mg/h on day 1 and increased every day for 0.5 mg/h to a maximum dose of 2.0mg/h on day 4
intra-arterial nimodipine
during endovascular procedure 2mg of nimodipine is infused via a microcatheter into the internal carotid artery for 20 minutes
Sponsors
Collaborators: University of Vienna, Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
Leads: Medical University of Vienna

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov