| Literature DB >> 28923301 |
Kogenta Nakamura1, Kazuro Ikawa2, Genya Nishikawa3, Ikuo Kobayashi3, Masahiro Narushima4, Hiroyuki Muramatsu3, Shingo Morinaga3, Keishi Kajikawa3, Yoshiharu Kato3, Masahito Watanabe3, Kenji Zennami3, Kent Kanao3, Norifumi Morikawa2, Makoto Sumitomo3.
Abstract
The present study examined the clinical pharmacokinetics of pazufloxacin in prostate tissue and estimated the probability of target attainment for tissue-specific pharmacodynamic goals related to treating prostatitis using various intravenous dosing regimens. Patients with prostatic hypertrophy received prophylactic infusions of pazufloxacin (500 mg, n = 23; 1000 mg, n = 25) for 0.5 h prior to transurethral prostate resection. Drug concentrations in plasma (0.5-5 h) and prostate tissue (0.5-1.5 h) were measured by high-performance liquid chromatography and used for subsequent noncompartmental and three-compartmental analysis. Monte Carlo simulation was performed to evaluate the probability of target attainment of a specific minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) in prostate tissue: the proportion that achieved both area under the drug concentration over time curve (AUC)/MIC = 100 and maximum concentration (Cmax)/MIC = 8. Prostatic penetration of pazufloxacin was good with mean Cmax ratios (prostate tissue/plasma) of 0.82-0.99 and for AUC, 0.80-0.98. The probability of reaching target MIC concentrations in prostate tissue was more than 90% for dosing schedules of 0.25 mg/L for 500 mg every 24 h (500 mg daily), 0.5 mg/L for 500 mg every 12 h (1000 mg daily), 1 mg/L for 1000 mg every 24 h (1000 mg daily), and 2 mg/L for 1000 mg every 12 h (2000 mg daily). Importantly, the 2000 mg daily regimen of pazufloxacin produced a profile sufficient to have an antibacterial effect in prostate tissue against clinical isolates of Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumonia with MIC values less than 2 mg/L.Entities:
Keywords: Pazufloxacin; Pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics; Prostatitis; Transurethral resection of the prostate
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28923301 DOI: 10.1016/j.jiac.2017.08.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Chemother ISSN: 1341-321X Impact factor: 2.211