| Literature DB >> 28766281 |
Stephan Ehrmann1,2, Jean Chastre3, Patrice Diot4,5, Qin Lu6.
Abstract
Nebulized antibiotic therapy directly targets airways and lung parenchyma resulting in high local concentrations and potentially lower systemic toxicities. Experimental and clinical studies have provided evidence for elevated lung concentrations and rapid bacterial killing following the administration of nebulized antibiotics during mechanical ventilation. Delivery of high concentrations of antibiotics to infected lung regions is the key to achieving efficient nebulized antibiotic therapy. However, current non-standardized clinical practice, the difficulties with implementing optimal nebulization techniques and the lack of robust clinical data have limited its widespread adoption. The present review summarizes the techniques and clinical constraints for optimal delivery of nebulized antibiotics to lung parenchyma during invasive mechanical ventilation. Pulmonary pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of nebulized antibiotic therapy to treat ventilator-associated pneumonia are discussed and put into perspective. Experimental and clinical pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics support the use of nebulized antibiotics. However, its clinical benefits compared to intravenous therapy remain to be proved. Future investigations should focus on continuous improvement of nebulization practices and techniques. Before expanding its clinical use, careful design of large phase III randomized trials implementing adequate therapeutic strategies in targeted populations is required to demonstrate the clinical effectiveness of nebulized antibiotics in terms of patient outcomes and reduction in the emergence of antibiotic resistance.Entities:
Keywords: Amikacin (MeSH); Colistin (MeSH); Nebulizers and vaporizers (MeSH); Pneumonia, ventilator-associated (MeSH)
Year: 2017 PMID: 28766281 PMCID: PMC5539056 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-017-0301-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Advantages and disadvantages of three types of nebulizers
| Jet nebulizer | Ultrasonic nebulizer | Vibrating mesh nebulizer | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanism of aerosol generation | Compressed gas and Venturi effect | High-frequency drug solution agitation by a piezoelectric crystal | High-frequency mesh vibrations pumping the drug solution trough tapered holes |
| Residual volume | Large | Medium | Small |
| Medication restriction | None | Degradation of heat-sensitive drugs | Highly concentrated or viscous solutions may cause damage to the nebulizer |
| Ergonomics | Not portable, need of compressed gas | Bulky | Portable, small size |
The particle sizes generated depend on each individual nebulizer model rather than the nebulizer type, and they are substantially impacted by the measurement conditions (e.g., temperature and humidity). For example, some specific jet nebulizers may deliver large particles (>5 µm for proximal targeting), whereas others deliver nanoparticles. All nebulizers available for clinical use produce sufficient droplets in the 1–5 µm size range of for pulmonary delivery during mechanical ventilation
Fig. 1Influence of the nebulizer position on aerosol losses during expiration. Nebulizer positioning upstream in the inspiratory limb enables the latter to act as a spacer/reservoir, thereby storing aerosol during expiration for an aerosol bolus delivery at the next insufflation
Fig. 2Differences between intravenous and nebulized antibiotic therapy. Intravenous infusion (yellow panel, left bottom corner) leads to high extrapulmonary concentrations and potential toxicities. Diffusion to the lung is limited and resulting concentrations that may not exceed minimal inhibitory concentration can lead to treatment failure in challenging host–pathogen combinations. Nebulized delivery (blue panel, right top corner), implementing an optimized technique (detailed in Table 3) results in higher pulmonary concentrations that are above the resistance emergence prevention threshold, thus reducing the likelihood of resistant strain selection. These concentrations are well above the minimal inhibitory concentration, thus resulting in improved efficacy of concentration-dependent antibiotics, even with difficult-to-treat pathogens; systemic side effects may be reduced. Nebulization requires carful implementation so as to avoid potential respiratory side effects. PK pharmacokinetics, V i inspiratory flow, RR respiratory rate, T i inspiratory time
Key good practices for optimal antibiotic nebulization during mechanical ventilation
| Organization | Use standard operating procedures and a checklist. Ensure adequate staff training |
| Nebulizer | Use nebulizers with a small residual volume |
| Medication solution | Use solutions for inhalation |
| Nebulizer position | Position the nebulizer (continuous delivery) upstream in the inspiratory limb at 15–40 cm of the |
| Humidification | Remove the heat and moisture exchanger during nebulization; if using a heated humidifier, consider switching it off or use of a dry circuit |
| Ventilator settings | Volume-controlled constant flow ventilation. Use low respiratory rate, low inspiratory flow and a long inspiratory time |
| Safety | Place a new filter between the expiratory limb and the ventilator for each nebulization |
Colistin ELF and plasma concentrations after nebulization with different doses
| Study | Athanassa [44] ( | Boisson [45] ( | Bihan [46] ( | Lu [6] ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nebulized dose | 1 MIU | 2 MIU | 4 MIU | 5 MIU |
| Nebulizer | Vibrating mesh nebulizer, continuous delivery, optimized conditions | |||
| Colistin assay | HPLC | LC–MS/MS | LC–MS/MS | HPLC |
| VAP/VAT | VAT | VAP | VAP | VAP |
| Lung ELFmax (mg/L) | 6.73 (4.8–10.1) | 1137 | NA | NA |
| Lung ELFmin (mg/L) | 2.0 (1.0–3.8) | 9.53 | NA | NA |
| Plasma Cmax (mg/L) | 1.6 (1.5–1.9) | 0.73 | 2.9 | 2.2 ± 1.3 |
| Plasma Cmin (mg/L) | 0.3 (0.3–0.5) | 0.15 | 2.4 | 1.4 ± 0.9 |
Data are presented as mean ± SD, medians (25–75% interquartile) or maximum and minimum values
HPLC High-performance liquid chromatography, VAP ventilator-associated pneumonia; VAT ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis, ELF epithelial lining fluid, LC–MS/MS liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry, Cmax maximum plasma concentration, Cmin minimum plasma concentration
a Blood sampled after the first dose; b blood sample performed at steady-state