To hear about similar clinical trials, please enter your email below
Trial Title:
Effect of Ketamine on Intraoperative Motor Evoked Potentials
NCT ID:
NCT06140927
Condition:
Spine Fusion
Spine Tumor
Spinal Stenosis
Conditions: Official terms:
Spinal Stenosis
Ketamine
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
Phase 3
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Allocation:
N/A
Intervention model:
Single Group Assignment
Intervention model description:
Patients will serve as their own control and baseline measurements will be made before
the administration of study drug. After baseline measurements, increasing doses of the
study drug will be administered and effects measured.
Primary purpose:
Diagnostic
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Drug
Intervention name:
Ketamine
Description:
Patients will be administered ketamine at increasing doses followed by measurements of
motor-evoked potentials.
Arm group label:
Ketamine
Summary:
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about the effect of ketamine on
intraoperative motor evoked potentials in adult patients undergoing thoracolumbar spinal
fusions. Participants will undergo a standard anesthetic. In addition to the standard
anesthetic, the patients will be administered increasing doses of ketamine with
motor-evoked potentials being measured at each dose, to assess any impacts.
Detailed description:
Spinal surgeries continue to increase in frequency and complexity. An important safety
protocol is the use of intraoperative motor evoked potentials (MEP) to monitor the
integrity and function of the spinal cord and alert the surgeon of any potential injury.
Transcranial electric motor evoked potentials stimulate the motor cortex and produce a
myogenic response. This modality can assess the function of all pathways including the
motor cortex, the lateral corticospinal tracts, the function of the alpha motor neurons,
and peripheral nerves.
Various anesthetic agents can impact the critical parameters of MEPs. Inhaled volatile
anesthetics and nitrous oxide are highly suppressive in a dose-dependent manner
decreasing the amplitude of the myogenic response and prolonging the latency. Propofol is
also suppressive of MEPs, although high quality data can still be obtained at clinically
relevant doses for anesthesia. For this reason, most anesthesiologists will use propofol
as the backbone of any anesthetic that involves neurophysiologic monitoring.
Because spine surgeries are exceptionally painful, anesthesiologists will often
incorporate adjuncts that can decrease pain and postoperative opioid usage. The effect of
these adjuncts on intraoperative evoked potentials is incompletely described and
important work remains to detail these effects.
Ketamine, a phencyclidine derivative that is an NMDA receptor antagonist, is a widely
used adjunct anesthetic due to its analgesic and hypnotic properties during spine
surgeries. Ketamine has shown significant opioid-sparing and analgesic benefits when used
in patients undergoing spine surgery.
Intraoperative neuromonitoring (IONM), including motor evoked potentials (MEP), are
increasingly used during spinal surgeries to help identify potentially reversible injury
to neural structures.
The literature is full of conflicting and poor quality data regarding the effect of
adding ketamine to an anesthetic and the effects on MEPs. Therefore, the investigators'
goal is to help characterize the effects of this commonly used medication on a critical
safety monitor for procedures involving the spinal cord.
The summation of excitation of spinal ventral horn neurons is thought to contribute to
the myogenic response during transcranial motor evoked potentials. Because ketamine can
inhibit N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor-mediated glutaminergic activity, it has the
potential to inhibit this summation process and interfere with IONM. Despite this
theoretical potential to interfere with IONM, ketamine is widely and successfully used
during spinal surgeries. There are conflicting reports about the use of higher doses
during surgery.
Prior studies have shown that moderate doses of ketamine have little to no effect on
MEPs, and so for years the received wisdom was that ketamine is a benign agent, and is
safe to using during spinal procedures utilizing IONM. However, following up on a case
report, a group reported that even higher doses of ketamine may be able to dose
dependently suppress MEPs. It is difficult to explain the differences between these
reports, and it may be partially attributable to differences in neuromonitoring
techniques/practices. These results are also interesting, because there is some
suggestions in the community that it could be beneficial to run substantially higher
doses of ketamine intraoperatively, using it not just as an opioid sparing adjunct, but
more as a substantial contributor to the overall anesthestic state. The logic has been
that ketamine, as opposed to propofol (the current foundation of an anesthetic compatible
with IONM) has benign effects on MEPs and can reduce postoperative pain. However, if
higher doses of ketamine can suppress MEPs, this change in anesthetic technique may not
be warranted.
Protocol:
Main Visit: Patients will receive general anesthesia in the usual fashion for the
indicated procedures. This anesthetic will be standardized between patients. The patients
will also have the necessary equipment for neuromonitoring placed. This equipment is
placed identically for patients who are or are not in our study, and the investigators
will not add any additional monitors. All patients participating in the study will have
neuromonitoring as part of their spine surgery as standard care. Baseline motor-evoked
potential data will then be collected. This baseline data is also standard practice and
not a study-specific procedure. After the baseline data is collected patients will then
be administered a bolus of ketamine 0.1mg/kg followed by an infusion of 3mcg/kg/min to
maintain steady-state plasma levels. After 5 min to allow equilibration, a new set of
baseline MEP data will be acquired. This process takes approximately 5 minutes. The
investigators will also collect a blood specimen at this time to measure the ketamine
plasma level. The investigators will then administer an additional bolus of 0.3 mg/kg of
ketamine and increase the infusion to 15 mcg/kg/min to maintain steady-state plasma
levels. The investigators will repeat the acquisition of baseline MEP data and a blood
sample. Finally, the investigators will administer an additional bolus of 0.85 mg/kg of
ketamine and increase the infusion to 50 mcg/kg/min to maintain steady-state plasma
levels. The investigators will repeat the acquisition of baseline MEP data and a blood
sample. Thereafter, the surgery will commence following usual anesthetic care at the
discretion of the anesthesiologist. This dosing scheme is designed to mimic the
steady-state plasma concentrations that would result from administering an infusion of
3mcg/kg/min, 15mcg/kg/min, and 50mcg/kg/min for prolonged periods of time. A commercial
application for predicting plasma concentrations was used to calculate these doses.
General Demographic Data: Data including age, sex, race, and preoperative comorbid
conditions will be collected. These data will be obtained by review of the patient's
medical record.
Ketamine Plasma Levels: Blood samples will be collected by research personnel after each
dose increase of ketamine and at the time the MEP data is obtained.
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Adult patients (>18 years of age) undergoing posterior spinal fusions.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Sensitivity or allergy to ketamine.
- Schizophrenia or other psychotic conditions
- Uncontrolled hypertension with systolic blood pressure greater than 180 mmHg
- Myocardial Infarction
- Large vascular aneurysms
- Patients on ketamine as outpatient therapy.
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
100 Years
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
University of California, San Francisco
Address:
City:
San Francisco
Zip:
94143
Country:
United States
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Marc Buren, MD
Phone:
415-514-3781
Email:
marc.buren@ucsf.edu
Start date:
December 1, 2023
Completion date:
December 1, 2026
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
University of California, San Francisco
Agency class:
Other
Source:
University of California, San Francisco
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT06140927