Baseline-controlled clinical trials have uniformly shown that sodium nitroprusside has a prompt hypotensive effect, at least initially, in all populations. With increasing rates of infusion, sodium nitroprusside has been able to lower blood pressure without an observed limit of effect.
Clinical trials have also shown that the hypotensive effect of sodium nitroprusside is associated with reduced blood loss in a variety of major surgical procedures.
In patients with acute heart failure and increased peripheral vascular resistance, administration of sodium nitroprusside causes reductions in peripheral resistance, increases in cardiac output, and reductions in left ventricular filling pressure.
Progressive tachyphylaxis to the hypotensive effects of sodium nitroprusside has been reported in several trials and numerous case reports. The mechanism of tachyphylaxis to sodium nitroprusside remains unknown.
Pediatric
The effects of sodium nitroprusside to induce hypotension were evaluated in two trials in pediatric patients less than 17 years of age. In both trials, at least 50% of the patients were pre-pubertal, and about 50% of these pre-pubertal patients were less than 2 years of age, including 4 neonates. The primary efficacy variable was the mean arterial pressure (MAP).
There were 203 pediatric patients in a parallel, dose-ranging study (Study 1). During the 30-minute blinded phase, patients were randomized 1:1:1:1 to receive sodium nitroprusside 0.3, 1, 2, or 3 mcg/kg/min. The infusion rate was increased step-wise to the target dose rate (i.e., 1/3 of the full rate for the first 5 minutes, 2/3 of the full rate for the next 5 minutes, and the full dose rate for the last 20 minutes). If the investigator believed that an increase to the next higher dose rate would be unsafe, the infusion remained at the current rate for the remainder of the blinded infusion. Since there was no placebo group, the change from baseline likely overestimates the true magnitude of blood pressure effect. Nevertheless, MAP decreased 11 to 20 mmHg from baseline across the four doses (Table 1).
There were 63 pediatric patients in a long-term infusion trial (Study 2). During an open-label phase (12 to 24 hours), sodium nitroprusside was started at 0.3 mcg/kg/min and titrated according to the BP response.
Patients were then randomized to placebo or to continuing the same dose of sodium nitroprusside. The average MAP was greater in the control group than in the sodium nitroprusside group for every time point during the blinded withdrawal phase, demonstrating that sodium nitroprusside is effective for at least 12 hours.
In both studies, similar effects on MAP were seen in all age groups.
Table 2: Change from Baseline in MAP (mmHg) After 30 Minutes Double-Blind Infusion (Study 1) | Dose (mcg/kg/min) |
| Endpoint | 0.3 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| (N = 50) | (N = 49) | (N = 53) | (N = 51) |
| Baseline | 76 ± 11 | 77 ± 15 | 74 ± 12 | 76 ± 12 |
| 30 Min | 65 ± 13 | 60 ± 15 | 54 ± 12 | 60 ± 18 |
| Change from | -11 ± 16 | -17 ± 13 | -20 ± 16 | -17 ± 19 |
| Baseline | (-15, -6.5) | (-21, -13) | (-24, -13) | (-22, -11) |
| Mean ± SD (95% CI) |