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We chat about neuromuscular blockade, monitoring, and reversal in the ICU, including why sugammadex isn’t more widely used, with Sara J Hyland, PharmD, BCCCP, FCCP, researcher and clinical pharmacist in perioperative and emergency medicine.
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Takeaway lessons
- Aminosteroids (rocuronium, vecuronium) can be reversed by neostigmine + glycopyrrolate (the latter to mitigate peripheral cholinergic effects of neo), or sugammadex. Benzylisoquinoliniums (e.g. cisatracurium) can only be reversed by the neostigmine option.
- Neostigmine is an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor; in other words, it doesn’t directly antagonize the effect of the paralytic, it simply helps boost the supply of ACH at the neuromuscular junction to overcome it. This means its reversal effect is indirect and imperfect.
- Neo is completely ineffective when blockade is deep. In fact, it can have a paradoxical effect of prolonging paralysis when used in these situations. It should really only be used when the train-of-four is 4 twitches. It is also slower acting than sugammadex, and even given with glyco, has inevitable risk of cholinergic toxicity (e.g. bradycardia).
- Neo + glycopyrrolate costs around $30 for a dose, versus around $150-200 for a sugammadex approach. (This does not take into consideration broader system costs from a less effective and less efficient reversal method.) Overall cost with sporadic ICU use will always pale in comparison to high-volume perioperative use, though.
- Sugammadex is a direct binder of the rocuronium/vecuronium molecule, and can attract even already-bound compound from its receptor; hence, it can function at any level of blockade (even very deep).
- A large number of our patients who appear to have cleared their paralysis (seeming clinically “strong,” TOF 4) still have a significant continuing effect of neuromuscular blockade. This may contribute to failures of extubation and other complications. In one ICU study of random ICU patients, >40% had active neuromuscular blockade to a degree that would have precluded extubation by anesthesia standards.
- As a result, the international, guideline-directed gold standard for reversal of neuromuscular blockade is now using quantitative, objective neuromuscular monitoring (before and after reversal agents) to confirm resolution to a >90% TOF ratio.
- What’s that? Normal train-of-four devices (qualitative peripheral nerve stimulators) are inadequate; 4 out of 4 twitches may be present despite 70% of nicotinic ACH receptors still blocked. Better devices (with accelerometers, myometers, EMG, etc) can measure the actual twitch strength and compare the ratio of first to last twitch—i.e. does it fade or maintain strength? The fourth twitch should be >90% the strength of the first before extubation. (All four twitches must be present to even attempt this technique; other techniques can be used at levels of blockade deeper than this.)
- Although sugammadex will be effective at any degree of block, it is dosed differently at different levels, so pre-drug assessment is still important. (It may also reveal the option of using neostigmine, if desired.) Post-drug assessment is then needed to confirm adequate response.
- “Recurarization,” or recurrence of paralysis after reversal, is a known phenomenon. It is rare after sugammadex, and tends to occur when it was underdosed; the immediate effect may be good but the paralytic may outlast the reversal. This phenomenon should be considered in a patient with unexpected weakness/coma or respiratory failure after reversal, and either neuromuscular testing or empiric sugammadex should be considered.
- There is an anaphylaxis risk with sugammadex, as the molecule type is also found (and could have induced sensitization) in many everyday cosmetic compounds. But the risk is extremely low (well under 1%)—lower than rocuronium, and in fact, anaphylaxis to rocuronium potentially could be treated with sugammadex.
- There is a small risk of mild bradycardia and hypotension after sugammadex, as well as rare reports of sudden unexplained cardiovascular collapse. The cause of these is not well understood, and in many cases may be mere confounders.
- Why isn’t sugammadex widely used in the ICU, as it is in the perioperative world? Unclear; we may not realize how common residual paralysis is (i.e. very), and over-rely on insensitive clinical assessments (squeezing hands, tidal volumes, lifting the head, etc). This was the situation in anesthesia two decades ago and we may be lagging behind.
- In some cases rocuronium may be having residual effects hours to days later; the duration of effect on the package insert is defined as median time to >25% of first twitch height reemerging, a standard far below what clinically-relevant paralysis might entail. This residual effect might cause failures of extubation, especially in tenuous patients.
- Even in intubated patients, persistent paralytic effect may be a cause of distress and PTSD if sedation has been inadvertently weaned (i.e. awake paralysis).
- In the absence of quantitative monitoring, a good clinical assessment, confirmation of four twitches on TOF, and at least an eyeball assessment of twitch strength is a reasonable starting point.
- In a patient remaining intubated (e.g. reversed to facilitate neuro exams), the demands for monitoring are less; an empiric low-dose sugammadex (e.g. 200 mg) titrated to a patient who can engage in your exam is probably fine—they don’t need complete strength. Even simple “bugzapper” TOF devices can rule out deep blockade in these situations.
- In a failed airway situation, give a hefty dose empirically. A post-sugammadex check may still be appropriate, though. Don’t expect this to rescue you in a crashing patient. Note that if you gave sugammadex, it may linger in the body for days, making it difficult to reparalyze with an additional dose of rocuronium if your airway approach requires that. (You may need to use a higher roc dose later, or succinylcholine, or cisatracurium.) Tell anesthesia if they’re taking a patient to the OR, or reattempting an RSI, if you previously gave sugammadex.
- The paralytic/sugammadex complex circulates in the blood until it’s renally cleared. With a low GFR, this can take a long time; there is a theoretical risk of the complex dissociating at some later point and re-paralysis occurring. In a dialysis-dependent patient, in fact, it may not clear very efficiently with lower-flux filters, such as during CRRT. For these reasons, in the past, renal failure was a contraindication to sugammadex, but data and clinical experience has since shown it to be generally safe.
References
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