Litcius/Paper detail

Pharmacokinetics of adrenaline autoinjectors

Paul Turner, Antonella Muraro, Graham Roberts

2021Clinical & Experimental Allergy24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Anaphylaxis is a medical emergency with adrenaline acknowledged as the first-line therapy. It is therefore important that patients have access to self-injectable adrenaline in the community. Manufacturers have been requested by European Medicine Regulators to generate pharmacokinetic data for these autoinjector devices. For the first time, these data provide an insight into how individual devices work in different populations, and how they compare. We undertook a thorough literature search and also accessed grey literature, using searches of medicine regulators' websites and freedom of information requests. The data demonstrate that it takes at least 5-10 min to achieve early peak plasma concentration for most devices. The specific autoinjector device seems to be the most important determinant of pharmacokinetics, with different devices giving rise to different plasma adrenaline profiles. Needle length does not seem to be the most important factor; rather, the force and speed of injection (which varies from one device to another) is likely to be of greater importance. In general, peak plasma adrenaline concentration is lower and time-to-peak concentration longer with increased skin-to-muscle depth. However, it is difficult to draw conclusions with the current available data, due to a lack of head-to-head comparisons, small numbers of study participants and the failure to acknowledge the biphasic nature of intramuscular adrenaline absorption for analysis purposes.

Topics & Concepts

PharmacokineticsMedicineAnesthesiaAnaphylaxisPlasma concentrationAbsorption (acoustics)EpinephrineIntensive care medicinePharmacologyAllergyImmunologyPhysicsAcousticsFood Allergy and Anaphylaxis ResearchDrug-Induced Adverse ReactionsAsthma and respiratory diseases