Effects of dexmedetomidine, propofol, sevoflurane and S-ketamine on the human metabolome A randomised trial using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

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Nummela , A J , Laaksonen , L T , Laitio , T T , Kallionpaa , R E , Langsjo , J W , Scheinin , J M , Vahlberg , T J , Koskela , H T , Aittomaki , V , Valli , K J , Revonsuo , A , Niemi , M , Perola , M & Scheinin , H 2022 , ' Effects of dexmedetomidine, propofol, sevoflurane and S-ketamine on the human metabolome A randomised trial using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ' , European Journal of Anaesthesiology , vol. 39 , no. 6 , pp. 521-532 . https://doi.org/10.1097/EJA.0000000000001591

Title: Effects of dexmedetomidine, propofol, sevoflurane and S-ketamine on the human metabolome A randomised trial using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
Author: Nummela, Aleksi J.; Laaksonen, Lauri T.; Laitio, Timo T.; Kallionpaa, Roosa E.; Langsjo, Jaakko W.; Scheinin, Joonas M.; Vahlberg, Tero J.; Koskela, Harri T.; Aittomaki, Viljami; Valli, Katja J.; Revonsuo, Antti; Niemi, Mikko; Perola, Markus; Scheinin, Harry
Contributor organization: HUSLAB
Department of Clinical Pharmacology
Medicum
INDIVIDRUG - Individualized Drug Therapy
Faculty of Medicine
Research Programs Unit
University of Helsinki
CAMM - Research Program for Clinical and Molecular Metabolism
Date: 2022-06
Language: eng
Number of pages: 12
Belongs to series: European Journal of Anaesthesiology
ISSN: 0265-0215
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1097/EJA.0000000000001591
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/345851
Abstract: BACKGROUND Pharmacometabolomics uses large-scale data capturing methods to uncover drug-induced shifts in the metabolic profile. The specific effects of anaesthetics on the human metabolome are largely unknown. OBJECTIVE We aimed to discover whether exposure to routinely used anaesthetics have an acute effect on the human metabolic profile. DESIGN Randomised, open-label, controlled, parallel group, phase IV clinical drug trial. SETTING The study was conducted at Turku PET Centre, University of Turku, Finland, 2016 to 2017. PARTICIPANTS One hundred and sixty healthy male volunteers were recruited. The metabolomic data of 159 were evaluable. INTERVENTIONS Volunteers were randomised to receive a 1-h exposure to equipotent doses (EC50 for verbal command) of dexmedetomidine (1.5 ng ml(-1); n = 40), propofol (1.7 mu g ml(-1); n = 40), sevoflurane (0.9% end-tidal; n = 39), S-ketamine (0.75 mu g ml(-1); n = 20) or placebo (n = 20). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Metabolite subgroups of apolipoproteins and lipoproteins, cholesterol, glycerides and phospholipids, fatty acids, glycolysis, amino acids, ketone bodies, creatinine and albumin and the inflammatory marker GlycA, were analysed with nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy from arterial blood samples collected at baseline, after anaesthetic administration and 70 min post-anaesthesia. RESULTS All metabolite subgroups were affected. Statistically significant changes vs. placebo were observed in 11.0, 41.3, 0.65 and 3.9% of the 155 analytes in the dexmedetomidine, propofol, sevoflurane and S-ketamine groups, respectively. Dexmedetomidine increased glucose, decreased ketone bodies and affected lipoproteins and apolipoproteins. Propofol altered lipoproteins, fatty acids, glycerides and phospholipids and slightly increased inflammatory marker glycoprotein acetylation. Sevoflurane was relatively inert. S-ketamine increased glucose and lactate, whereasbranched chain amino acids and tyrosine decreased. CONCLUSION A 1-h exposure to moderate doses of routinely used anaesthetics led to significant and characteristic alterations in the metabolic profile. Dexmedetomidine-induced alterations mirror a2-adrenoceptor agonism. Propofol emulsion altered the lipid profile. The inertness of sevoflurane might prove useful in vulnerable patients. S-ketamine induced amino acid alterations might be linked to its suggested antidepressive properties.
Subject: CEREBRAL GLUCOSE-METABOLISM
GENETIC INHIBITION
BLOOD-FLOW
IN-VIVO
ANESTHESIA
HYPERTRIGLYCERIDEMIA
EPIDEMIOLOGY
RESPONSES
INFUSION
EXERCISE
3126 Surgery, anesthesiology, intensive care, radiology
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


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