| Literature DB >> 25019523 |
Laurens Manning1, Cameron Wright2, Paul R Ingram3, Timothy J Whitmore4, Christopher H Heath5, Ingrid Manson2, Madhu Page-Sharp6, Sam Salman7, John Dyer8, Timothy M E Davis7.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Concerns regarding the clinical impact of meropenem instability in continuous infusion (CI) devices may contribute to inconsistent uptake of this method of administration across outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) services.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25019523 PMCID: PMC4096762 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0102023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Meropenem degradation in elastomeric infusion devices at different conditions over a 24-hour period (data points are mean values).
Meropenem recovery, percentage of maximum deliverable dose and time less than 20°C for 24-hour elastomeric infusion device at different conditions (data are given as means [Standard Deviations; SD]).
| Infusion concentration (w/v), cooled/uncooled | Time <20°C (hours) | Meropenem recovery at 24 hours (% [SD]) | Maximum deliverable dose (% [SD]) |
| 1%, uncooled | 3.68 | 87.6 (6.1) | 96.4 (8.7) |
| 2%, uncooled | 3.34 | 82.9 (7.8) | 87.2 (6.6) |
| 1%, cooled | 12.14 | 90.3 (6.5) | 95.0 (5.7) |
| 2%, cooled | 12.39 | 87.0 (6.2) | 92.9 (3.9) |
Figure 2Median and 95% prediction intervals (PI95) of simulated plasma meropenem concentrations incorporating degradation as well as pharmacokinetic variability in 200 simulations of an average, 70 kg male patient receiving meropenem by continuous infusion in a cooled infuser containing 1% meropenem (figure 2A) and ‘room temperature’ infuser containing 2% meropenem (figure 2B).
Susceptibility breakpoints for Pseudomonas aeruginosa (upper grey dashed line) and Enterobacteriaciae (lower grey dashed line) are also shown in each.