| Literature DB >> 22898246 |
Mohd H Abdul-Aziz1, Joel M Dulhunty, Rinaldo Bellomo, Jeffrey Lipman, Jason A Roberts.
Abstract
There is controversy over whether traditional intermittent bolus dosing or continuous infusion of beta-lactam antibiotics is preferable in critically ill patients. No significant difference between these two dosing strategies in terms of patient outcomes has been shown yet. This is despite compelling in vitro and in vivo pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) data. A lack of significance in clinical outcome studies may be due to several methodological flaws potentially masking the benefits of continuous infusion observed in preclinical studies. In this review, we explore the methodological shortcomings of the published clinical studies and describe the criteria that should be considered for performing a definitive clinical trial. We found that most trials utilized inconsistent antibiotic doses and recruited only small numbers of heterogeneous patient groups. The results of these trials suggest that continuous infusion of beta-lactam antibiotics may have variable efficacy in different patient groups. Patients who may benefit from continuous infusion are critically ill patients with a high level of illness severity. Thus, future trials should test the potential clinical advantages of continuous infusion in this patient population. To further ascertain whether benefits of continuous infusion in critically ill patients do exist, a large-scale, prospective, multinational trial with a robust design is required.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22898246 PMCID: PMC3475088 DOI: 10.1186/2110-5820-2-37
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Figure 1Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic parameters of antibiotics on a concentration vs. time curve. T>MIC, time that a drug’s plasma concentration remains above the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) for a dosing period; Cmax, maximum plasma antibiotic concentration; AUC0-24, area under the concentration-time curve during a 24-hour time period.
Figure 2The simulated concentration-time profile of a beta-lactam antibiotic when administered by intermittent bolus dosing or continuous infusion (Vd = 0.22 L/kg; T = 2.45 hr). Intermittent bolus dosing (solid lines); continuous infusion (dotted lines).
Figure 3Observed steady-state plasma and tissue concentrations for meropenem administered to critically ill patients with sepsis by intermittent bolus dosing and continuous infusion (adapted from Roberts et al. 2009, J Antimicrob Chemother). Continuous infusion (CI) meropenem plasma concentration (solid dark lines); IB meropenem plasma concentration (dotted grey lines); IB meropenem interstitial fluid concentration (ISF) (solid grey lines); CI meropenem ISF concentration (dotted dark lines).
Possible advantages and disadvantages of employing continuous or intermittent administration of beta-lactam antibiotics
| Continuous infusion | More predictable antibiotic PK profiles | Relatively new antibiotic administration method thus requiring intensive educational effort to update clinical staff on the administration method prior to implementation |
| | Lower antibiotic daily dose may be appropriate with continuous infusion | Requires special infusion pumps and infusion bags that are costly |
| | Reduced drug acquisition costs when lower antibiotic doses are used | Some beta-lactams (e.g., meropenem) are not stable under prolonged exposure at room temperature and may produce and enhance degradation products that cause hypersensitivity reactions |
| | Effective resource consumption (e.g., reduce the time required for pharmacists or nurses to prepare and administer antibiotic) | Risk of drug wastage is high with this approach (e.g., when treatment ceased before infusion bag completed) |
| Intermittent bolus | Simple | PK/PD targets may not be achieved (especially in critically ill patients) |
| | Does not require dedicated line access for drug administration (incompatibility issues unlikely) | Neurological adverse effects are theoretically more possible with high Cmax |
| Less likely to have unexpected device failures and dosing delivery rate errors |
Characteristics of previously published studies for CI vs. IB of beta-lactam antibiotics
| Angus et al. [ | Not specified (Thailand) | Ceftazidime | Yes | Septicemic melioidosis | 21 | 48 (29–58) | 43 (27–73) | Not specified | Not specified | Not specified | Amx/clv or doxy, tmp/smx and chlora |
| Bodey et al. [ | Non-ICU (USA) | Cefamandole | No | Malignant diseases with neutropenia | 204 | Not specified | Adequate | Adequate | Not specified | Carbenicillin | |
| Buck et al. [ | Non-ICU (Germany) | Pip/tazo | No | Hospitalized infections | 24 | 60-88b | 32-76b | Not specified | Adequate | No | Nil stated |
| Buijk et al. [ | ICU (Netherlands) | Ceftazidime | Yes | Intra-abdominal infections | 18 | 12 (46–76) | 6 (42–87) | Not specified | Not specified | No | Various |
| Georges et al. [ | ICU (France) | Cefepime | Yes | Critically ill with gram-negative infections | 50 | 50 ± 17 | 46 ± 24 | Not specified | Not specified | No | Amikacin |
| Hanes et al. [ | ICU (USA) | Ceftazidime | Yes | Critically ill trauma | 32 | 33.5 ± 12.5 | 36.1 ± 12.8 | Not specified | Not specified | No | Nil stated |
| Kojika et al. [ | Not specified (Japan) | Meropenem | No | Intra-abdominal infections | 10 | 67.4 ± 14.6 | 60 ± 12.8 | Not specified | Not specified | No | Nil stated |
| Lagast et al. [ | Not specified (Belgium) | Cefoperazone | No | Gram-negative septicaemia | 45 | 37-77b | Not specified | Not specified | No | Nil stated | |
| Lau et al. [ | ICU (USA) | Pip/tazo | No | Complicated intra-abdominal infections | 262 | 50.4 ± 16.6 | 49.3 ± 17.8 | Not specified | Not specified | No | Nil stated |
| Lubasch et al. [ | Not specified (Germany) | Ceftazidime | No | Hospitalized patients with COPD exacerbation | 81 | 65.3 ± 10.1 | Not specified | Not specified | No | Nil stated | |
| Nicolau et al. [ | ICU (USA) | Ceftazidime | Yes | Critically ill patients with sepsis | 41 | 46 ± 16 | 56 ± 20 | Adequate | Not specified | No | Tobramycin |
| Pedeboscq et al. [ | ICU (France) | Pip/tazo | Yes | Severe sepsis | 7 | 58 ± 12 | Not specified | Not specified | No | Ofloxacin | |
| Rafati et al. [ | ICU (Iran) | Piperacillin | Yes | Critically ill patients with sepsis | 40 | 50.1 ± 22.2 | 48.0 ± 20.7 | Not specified | Not specified | No | Amikacin |
| Roberts et al. [ | ICU (Australia) | Ceftriaxone | Yes | Critically ill patients with sepsis | 57 | 43 ± 19 | 52 ± 16 | Adequate | Adequate | Adequatec | Multiple depending on indication |
| Sakka et al. [ | ICU (Germany) | Imi/cila | Yes | Critically ill patients with sepsis | 20 | 62 ± 16 | 59 ± 16 | Not specified | Adequate | No | Nil stated |
| Van Zanten et al. [ | Not specified (Netherlands) | Cefotaxime | No | Hospitalized patients with COPD exacerbation | 93 | 65.3 ± 8.4 | 68.6 ± 5.3 | Not specified | Not specified | No | Nil stated |
CI, continuous infusion; IB, intermittent bolus; Amx/clv, amoxicillin/clavulanic acid; doxy, doxycycline; tmp/smx, trimethoprim/sulphamethoxazole; chlora, chloramphenicol; pip/tazo, piperacillin/tazobactam; Imi/cila, imipenem/cilastatin; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
aValues are described as published results as mean (±SD) or median (range).
bValues are reported as range.
cOnly outcome assessment.
Figure 4The summary of the current limitations and flaws associated with the available clinical trial.
Antibiotic dosage and outcome data of previously published for CI vs. IB of beta-lactam antibiotics
| Angus et al. [ | Melioidosis | 10 (15) | 11 (21) | 12 mg/kg LD, then 4 mg/kg every 1 hr | 40 mg/kg every 8 hr | Yes | Mortality | 20% | 36.4% | 0.89 |
| Bodey et al. [ | Pneumonia, UTI, septicemia and neutropenic fever | 167 (ND) | 162 (ND) | 3 g LD, then 12 g/24 hr | 3 g every 6 hr | No | Clinical cure | 64.8% | 56.5% | ND |
| Buck et al. [ | Pneumonia, cholangitis and FUO | 12 (ND) | 12 (ND) | 2 g LD then 8 g/24 hrb | 4 g every 8 hrb | Yes | Clinical response | 67% | 67% | ND |
| Buijk et al. [ | Intra-abdominal infections | 12 (16) | 6 (14) | 1 g LD then 4.5 g/24 hr | 1.5 g every 8 hr | Yes | Mortality | 25% | 33% | 1.0 |
| Georges et al. [ | Pneumonia and septicemia | 24 (45c) | 23 (44c) | 2 g/12 hrs twice daily | 2 g every 12 hr | Yes | Mortality | 12% | 13% | NDd |
| Clinical cure | 85% | 67% | NDd | |||||||
| Duration of MV | 24 ± 13 | 25.3 ± 10 | NDd | |||||||
| LOS ICU | 34 ± 17 | 40 ± 15 | NDd | |||||||
| Hanes et al. [ | Pneumonia | 17 (13) | 14 (11) | 2 g LD then 60 mg/kg every 24 hr | 2 g every 8 hr | Yes | Duration of MV | 22.9 ± 19.9 | 13.3 ± 6.1 | 0.16 |
| LOS ICU | 26.8 ± 20.1 | 15.5 ± 5.9 | 0.11 | |||||||
| LOS Hospital | 41.7 ± 30.5 | 28.7 ± 15.9 | 0.37 | |||||||
| Duration of leukocytosis | 7.8 ± 7.3 | 11.3 ± 4.7 | 0.35 | |||||||
| Duration of pyrexia | 7.9 ± 4.4 | 4.3 ± 2.5 | 0.06 | |||||||
| Kojika et al. [ | Abdominal abscess | 5 (ND) | 5 (ND) | 0.5 g every 8 hr (over 3 hr) | 0.5 g every 8 hr (over 30 min) | No | Mortality | 20% | 0% | |
| Lagast et al. [ | Septicemia | 20 (ND) | 25 (ND) | Day 1: 1 g LD then 3 g/24 hr Day 2 +: 4 g/24 hr | 2 g every 12 hr | No | Mortality | 25% | 16% | ND |
| Clinical cure | 70% | 80% | ND | |||||||
| Lau et al. [ | Abdominal infections | 81 (8) | 86 (8) | 2 g LD then 12 g/24 hre | 3 g every 6 hre | No | Mortality | 0.76% | 2.6% | |
| Clinical cure | 86.4% | 88.4% | 0.817 | |||||||
| Adverse events | 89.2% | 87.1% | | |||||||
| Lubasch et al. [ | Chronic bronchitis | 41 (ND) | 40 (ND) | 2 g LD then 2 g/7 hr twice daily | 2 g every 8 hr | Yes | Clinical cure | 90.2% | 90% | NDd |
| Bacteriological cure | 90.2% | 87.5% | NDd | |||||||
| Nicolau et al. [ | Pneumonia | 17 (14) | 18 (16) | 1 g LD then 3 g/24 hrf | 2 g every 8 hrf | No | Clinical cure | 41% | 33% | 0.592 |
| Duration of MV | 7.9 ± 4.0 | 8.3 ± 4.3 | 0.97 | |||||||
| LOS ICU | 8.5 ± 3.4 | 9.3 ± 4.0 | 0.691 | |||||||
| Time to defervescence | 3.1 ± 2.1 | 5.2 ± 2.3 | 0.015 | |||||||
| WBC normalization | 7.3 ± 3.0g | 5.5 ± 4.2g | 0.259 | |||||||
| Pedeboscq et al. [ | Gastrointestinal-related infections | 3 (ND) | 4 (ND) | 12 g/24 hr | 4 g every 8 hr | Yes | Mortality | 0% | 0% | ND |
| Rafati et al. [ | Pneumonia, UTI, abdominal infections, SSI and septicemia | 20 (16) | 20 (14) | 2 g LD then 8 g/24 hr | 3 g every 6 hr | Yes | Mortality | 30% | 25% | 0.72 |
| Decrease in illness severity | | | CI > ITh | |||||||
| Duration of pyrexia | 2.4 ± 1.5 | 1.7 ± 0.7 | 0.08 | |||||||
| WBC normalization | 75% | 83% | ND | |||||||
| Roberts et al. [ | Septicemia | 29 (19) | 28 (16) | 0.5 g LD then 2 g/24 hr | Day 1: 2.5 g/24 hr Day 2: 2 g/24 hr | No | Mortality | 10% | 0% | 0.25 |
| Clinical curei | 52% | 20% | 0.04 | |||||||
| Duration of MV | 4.3 ± 4.5 | 3.4 ± 4.1 | 0.33 | |||||||
| LOS ICU | 10.8 ± 23.2 | 5.6 ± 6.0 | 0.29 | |||||||
| LOS hospital | 42 ± 6.9 | 24 ± 2.1 | 0.34 | |||||||
| Sakka et al. [ | Pneumonia | 10 (26) | 10 (28) | 1 g LD then 2 g/24 hr | 1 g every 8 hr | Yes | Mortality | 10% | 20% | ND |
| Van Zanten et al. [ | COPD exacerbations | 40 (ND) | 43 (ND) | 1 g LD then 2 g/24 hr | 1 g every 8 hr | Yes | Clinical cure | 93% | 93% | 0.93 |
APACHE, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation score; CI, continuous infusion; IB, intermittent bolus; PK/PD, pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic; UTI, urinary tract infection; FUO, fever of unknown origin; SSI, surgical site infection; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; ND, not described; LD, loading dose; MV, mechanical ventilation; LOS, length of stay; ICU, intensive care unit; WBC, white blood cells.
aValues are reported as mean.
bDose reduction in renal dysfunction-if creatinine clearance 25–60 mL/min (CI group 6.75 g/24 hr; IT group 4.5 g q12hr); if creatinine clearance <25 mL/min (CI group 4.5 g/24 hr; IB group 4.5 g every 24 hr).
cValues are SAPS II score.
dP values for nonsignificance were not reported.
eDose reduction in renal dysfunction-if creatinine clearance 20–40 mL/min (CI group 8 g-1 g/24 hr; IB group 2 g −0.25 g every 6 hr).
fDose reduction in renal dysfunction-if creatinine clearance 31–50 mL/min (CI group 2.5 g/24 hr; IB group 2 g every 12 hr); if creatinine clearance 21–30 mL/min (CI group 2 g/24 hr; IB group 2 g every 24 hr).
gx 109/L.
hSignificant difference in APACHE II scores on days 2, 3, and 4.
iA priori analysis.
Description of a randomized clinical trial that should be performed to investigate CI vs. IB beta-lactam antibiotics
| Population | Should only include patients with sepsis or severe sepsis |
| Intervention | Antibiotic dosing regimen should be similar between CI and IB group |
| a. A loading dose should be given to continuous infusion group to ensure rapid attainment of target antibiotic concentration | |
| b. An equal daily antibiotic dose should be given to continuous and bolus administration group | |
| c. Antibiotic doses should be specified according to the patient’s body weight | |
| d. Concomitant administration of other non-beta-lactam antibiotics should be allowed | |
| PK/PD analysis | Concurrent PK/PD analysis should be performed to support any findings |
| a, Measurements of antibiotic concentrations should be performed as long as contributing sites have necessary infrastructure to ensure apt sampling | |
| b. PK/PD analysis should evaluate the relative ability of IB to achieve a Cmin greater than 4 x MIC of the offending pathogen for 40-70% of the dosing interval while for CI, a Css greater than 4 x MIC | |
| Methods | |
| | Preferably multicenter in nature and recruits participants from different regions to improve generalizability of results |
| | |
| | Define eligibility criteria for participants to be included into trial |
| a. Definition of sepsis and severe sepsis should be described in detail | |
| b. Inclusion and exclusion criteria used should be explained | |
| | |
| | Detailed explanation on allocation sequence generation development |
| | Detailed allocation concealment mechanism |
| | |
| | Outcome evaluators for the trial should be blinded to participants management |
| | |
| | a. Endpoints selection should include primary (clinical outcome) and secondary (PK/PD; adverse event) endpoints |
| b. Data collection on the observed bacterial resistance in the two treatment arms should occur |