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The impact of Caesarean delivery on paracetamol and ketorolac pharmacokinetics: A paired analysis

  • Aida Kulo
  • , Kristel Van Calsteren
  • , Rene Verbesselt
  • , Anne Smits
  • , Roland Devlieger
  • , Jan De Hoon
  • , Karel Allegaert*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • University Hospitals Leuven

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademic

13 Citations (Scopus)
13 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Pharmacokinetics is a first, but essential step to improve population-tailored postoperative analgesia, also after Caesarean delivery. We therefore aimed to quantify the impact of caesarean delivery on the pharmacokinetics of intravenous (iv) paracetamol (2g, single dose) and iv ketorolac tromethamine (30mg, single dose) in 2 cohorts eachof 8 women at caesarean delivery and to compare these findings with postpartum to quantify intrapatient changes. We documented a higher median paracetamol clearance at delivery when compared to 10-15 weeks postpartum (11.7 to 6.4L/h·m 2, P<0.01), even after correction for weight-related changes. Similar conclusions were drawn for ketorolac: median clearance was higher at delivery with a subsequent decrease (2.03 to 1.43L/h·m 2, P<0.05) in postpartum (17-23 weeks). These differences likely reflect pregnancy- and caesarean-delivery-related changes in drug disposition. Moreover, postpartum paracetamol clearance was significantly lower when compared to estimates published in healthy young volunteers (6.4 versus 9.6L/h·m 2), while this was not the case for ketorolac (1.43 versus 1.48L/h·m 2). This suggests that postpartum is another specific status in young women that merits focused, compound-specific pharmacokinetic evaluation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number437639
JournalJournal of Biomedicine and Biotechnology
Volume2012
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 May 2012
Externally publishedYes

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