Vancomycin Dosing in Critically Ill Patients: Robust Methods for Improved Continuous-Infusion Regimens
Article 2011 en
Authors
JR
Jason A. Roberts
FT
Fabio Silvio Taccone
AU
Andrew Udy
Abstract
1 min read
Despite the development of novel antibiotics active against Gram-positive bacteria, vancomycin generally remains the first treatment, although rapidly achieving concentrations associated with maximal efficacy provides an unresolved challenge. The objective of this study was to conduct a population pharmacokinetic analysis of vancomycin in a large population of critically ill patients. This was a retrospective data collection of 206 adult septic critically ill patients who were administered vancomycin as a loading dose followed by continuous infusion. The concentration-versus-time data for vancomycin in serum was analyzed by a nonlinear mixed-effects modeling approach using NONMEM. Monte Carlo simulations were performed using the final covariate model. We found that the best population pharmacokinetic model consisted of a one-compartment linear model with combined proportional and additive residual unknown variability. The volume of distribution of vancomycin (1.5 liters/kg) was described by total body weight and clearance (4.6 liters/h) by 24-hour urinary creatinine clearance (CrCl), normalized to body surface area. Simulation data showed that a 35-mg/kg loading dose was necessary to rapidly achieve vancomycin concentrations of 20 mg/liter. Daily vancomycin requirements were dependent on CrCl, such that a patient with a CrCl of 100 ml/min/1.73 m² would require at least 35 mg/kg per day by continuous infusion to maintain target concentrations. In conclusion, we have found that higher-than-recommended loading and daily doses of vancomycin seem to be necessary to rapidly achieve therapeutic serum concentrations in these patients.
Stefano Cristallini, Maya Hites, Hakim Kabtouri, Jason A. Roberts, Marjorie Beumier, Frédéric Cotton, Jeffrey Lipman, Frédérique Jacobs, Jean Louis Vincent, Jacques Créteur, Fabio Silvio Taccone
Ilse C. E. Hendriksen, Deogratius Maiga, Martha M. Lemnge, George Mtove, Samwel Gesase, Hugh Reyburn, Niklas Lindegårdh, Nicholas Day, Lorenz von Seidlein, Arjen M. Dondorp, Joel Tärning, Sir Nicholas White
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