# Midazolam infusions for therapeutic management of pediatric refractory status epilepticus: a systematic review

**Authors:** K. Taneille Johnson, Ammar AlZadjali, Dawoud Al Nasseri, Jessie Cunningham, Kazuhiro Shoya, Cecil D. Hahn, John Basmaji, Nicole K. McKinnon

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fped.2025.1507325 · Frontiers in Pediatrics · 2025-04-14

## TL;DR

This review examines the best dosing of midazolam for treating severe seizures in children that do not respond to other treatments.

## Contribution

The study identifies a potential optimal dosing range for midazolam in pediatric refractory status epilepticus.

## Key findings

- Midazolam stopped seizures in 81% of patients with effective doses ranging from 1.7–13.0 μg/kg/min.
- A dose range of 2.0–5.0 μg/kg/min led to quicker seizure cessation in 92% of cases.
- Adverse events like intubation and hypotension were reported but were relatively uncommon.

## Abstract

We aim to determine the optimal dosing of midazolam continuous intravenous infusions for the treatment of pediatric refractory status epilepticus (RSE).

We searched Medline ALL, Embase, Embase Classic, Cochrane CENTRAL, and Web of Science in March 2023 and again in February 2024.

Randomized and non-randomized studies involving pediatric patients who received continuous midazolam for the treatment of RSE were eligible. Two authors independently conducted screening, full-text review, and data extraction. All methods followed PRISMA reporting guidelines. A narrative data synthesis was performed due to data heterogeneity.

Nineteen studies (448 patients) proved eligible; 3 were randomized control trials, while 16 were non-randomized studies. All studies had concerns regarding the risk of bias. Overall, midazolam aborted seizures in 363/448 (81%) participants, with mean effective doses of 1.7–13.0 μg/kg/min (0.17–0.78 mg/kg/h). The remaining 85 participants (19%) who did not achieve seizure cessation received maximum doses of 1.7–32.0 μg/kg/min (0.17–1.92 mg/kg/h) prior to transitioning to another agent. Only 4 studies specified that boluses were given with each titration. Twelve studies reported that seizure cessation occurred at a mean time of 1.4–546.0 min (range 0–720 min) after midazolam initiation. In 8 of these studies, effective midazolam doses clustered at 2.0–5.0 μg/kg/min (0.12–0.30 mg/kg/h), with seizure cessation occurring within 10–70 min in 204/221 (92%) participants. Treatment-associated adverse events included intubation in 42/221 (19%) and hypotension requiring fluids or no intervention in 18/221 (8%). The studies did not differentiate between intubations performed as part of the study protocol or prior to midazolam infusion initiation nor did they specify whether hypotension was related to the co-administration of phenytoin or phenobarbital.

Data supporting midazolam continuous infusion dosing are limited and heterogeneous. Our findings suggest a potential therapeutic window at rates of 2.0–5.0 μg/kg/min (0.12–0.30 mg/kg/h), with limited adverse risks. Earlier seizure cessation may be achieved by targeting this therapeutic window by starting treatment with higher doses than the typically used 1.0 μg/kg/min (0.06 mg/kg/h) or by rapidly escalating the dose.

Systematic Review Registration: PROSPERO, identifier CRD42023413038.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** midazolam (PubChem CID 4192), phenytoin (PubChem CID 1775), phenobarbital (PubChem CID 4763)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hypotension (MESH:D007022), RSE (MESH:D013226), seizure (MESH:D012640)
- **Chemicals:** phenobarbital (MESH:D010634), Midazolam (MESH:D008874), phenytoin (MESH:D010672)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

49 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12034653/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12034653