• AANA journal · Aug 2009

    Review

    New drug, fospropofol disodium: a propofol prodrug.

    • Mark Welliver and Susan M Rugari.
    • School of Nurse Anesthesia, Harris College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, Texas, USA. Mark.welliver@gmail.com
    • AANA J. 2009 Aug 1;77(4):301-8.

    AbstractThe use of propofol presents chemical and clinical concerns, including pain on injection, allergy risks, possible bacteria growth, and hyperlipidemia. These concerns have encouraged the search for alternative propofol formulations. Elimination of the soybean oil and lecithin carrier agents is difficult because the highly lipophilic diisopropyl phenol molecule does not dissolve in water. Propofol in aqueous solution would be a preferable alternative to lipid-based emulsions. One formulation of propofol is fospropofol disodium (Lusedra, Eisai Corporation of North America, Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey), previously known as Aquavan (MGI Pharma, Bloomington, Minnesota). Fospropofol is an aqueous solution of a propofol prodrug intended for injection. The discovery and development of this drug may address the concerns with the current propofol emulsion formulations while offering altered pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics for sedation. The structure, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, clinical studies, clinical applications, and implications are discussed.

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