| Literature DB >> 28926966 |
Sherif Hanafy Mahmoud1, Chen Shen2.
Abstract
Augmented renal clearance (ARC) is a manifestation of enhanced renal function seen in critically ill patients. The use of regular unadjusted doses of renally eliminated drugs in patients with ARC might lead to therapy failure. The purpose of this scoping review was to provide and up-to-date summary of the available evidence pertaining to the phenomenon of ARC. A literature search of databases of available evidence in humans, with no language restriction, was conducted. Databases searched were MEDLINE (1946 to April 2017), EMBASE (1974 to April 2017) and the Cochrane Library (1999 to April 2017). A total of 57 records were included in the present review: 39 observational studies (25 prospective, 14 retrospective), 6 case reports/series and 12 conference abstracts. ARC has been reported to range from 14-80%. ARC is currently defined as an increased creatinine clearance of greater than 130 mL/min/1.73 m² best measured by 8-24 h urine collection. Patients exhibiting ARC tend to be younger (<50 years old), of male gender, had a recent history of trauma, and had lower critical illness severity scores. Numerous studies have reported antimicrobials treatment failures when using standard dosing regimens in patients with ARC. In conclusion, ARC is an important phenomenon that might have significant impact on outcome in critically ill patients. Identifying patients at risk, using higher doses of renally eliminated drugs or use of non-renally eliminated alternatives might need to be considered in ICU patients with ARC. More research is needed to solidify dosing recommendations of various drugs in patients with ARC.Entities:
Keywords: augmented renal clearance; critically ill; enhanced renal function
Year: 2017 PMID: 28926966 PMCID: PMC5620577 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics9030036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Flow diagram of the literature search for studies addressing augmented renal clearance (ARC).
Summary of studies pertaining to ARC.
| Author, Year | Study Type | Age (Years) | Population | N | Sex (% Male) | Measured CrCl (mL/min)—Otherwise Specified | Intervention | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barletta et al. [ | Retrospective observational | 48 ± 19 | ICU trauma patients where measured SCr available and SCr < 115 µmol/L | 133 | 76 | 168 ± 65 | ARCTIC (Augmented Renal Clearance in Trauma Intensive Care) Scoring system suggested | 67% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min) ARC risk factors identified: from multivariate analysis were age < 56 years, age = 56–75 years, SCr < 62 µmol/L, male sex ARCTIC score > 6 had sensitivity 84% and specificity 68% |
| Naeem et al. [ | Prospective observational | ARC: 37 ± 16 | ICU patients with SCr < 115 µmol/L | 50 | ARC: 70 | ARC: 214 ± 46 | The effects of ARC on enoxaparin determined; Patients received enoxaparin 40 mg SC daily; Anti-Xa activity measured and compared among patients with and without ARC; measured 24 h CrCl | 40% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min) Anti-Xa activity did not differ in both groups at baseline and 4 h after administration ARC patients had significantly lower anti-Xa activity 12 and 24 h post enoxaparin administration; this implies short duration of action of enoxaparin in patients with ARC. |
| Udy et al. [ | Prospective observational (sub-study of BLING II RCT) | ARC: 52 (33–60) | ICU patients with severe sepsis | 254 | ARC: 73 | ARC: 165 (144–198) | Conducted to determine the effect of ARC on patient outcome; patients randomized to receive beta lactam antibiotics (piperacillin/tazobactam, ticarcillin/clavulanic acid or meropenem) by intermittent or continuous infusion; measured 8 h CrCl | 18% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min); mainly younger, male and with less organ dysfunction No outcome differences (ICU-free days or mortality) between ARC and non-ARC No outcome differences were identified between continuous or intermittent infusion strategy |
| Udy et al. [ | Prospective observational | 37 (24–49) | ICU (TBI patients with SCr < 120 µmol/L) | 11 | 82 | Median | Measured 8-h CrCl, cardiac output and ANP were determined and correlated | ARC complicates TBI patients (Measured CrCl generally > 150 mL/min); mainly males and with young age CrCl was not significantly associated with changes in ANP or cardiac output |
| Barletta et al. [ | Retrospective observational | 48 ± 18 | ICU (trauma) | 65 | 74 | 169 ± 70 | Measured 12-h CrCl compared with CG method, CKD-EPI, and MDRD-4 | 69% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min)—more common in younger patients and patients with SCr < 71 µmol/L Measured CrCl was significantly higher ( CG demonstrated lowest amount of bias (38 ± 56 mL/min) compared to CKD-EPI and MDRD-4 |
| Chu et al. [ | Retrospective observational | Group A: 63 ± 15 | Patients treated with vancomycin | 148 | 66 | Estimated by CG | Vancomycin 1000 mg IV Q12H regimen given; vancomycin levels drawn pre 4th or 5th dose; levels compared across three groups: A (CrCl < 80), B (CrCl 80–129), C (CrCl ≥ 130; ARC) | Patients with ARC (Group C) had higher percentage of subtherapeutic vancomycin Vancomycin trough concentrations at steady state: Group A = 25 ± 10, Group B = 15 ± 8, Group C = 9 ± 5 mg/L Vancomycin trough concentration below 10 mcg/mL: Group A = 0%, Group B = 28%, Group C = 63% |
| Declercq et al. [ | Prospective observational | Abdominal Surgery: 63 (51–71) | Non-critically ill surgery patients | 232 | Abdo. Surgery: 74 | Abdominal Surgery: 109 (82–135) | Aim to assess the prevalence of ARC in non-critically ill surgical patients; | Abdominal surgery patients: 30% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min) Trauma surgery patients: 35% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min) The study identified presence of ARC in non-ICU surgery patients especially in younger male patients and undergoing trauma surgery |
| Hirai et al. [ | Retrospective observational | 4.4 (range 1–15) | Pediatric ICU patients with normal renal function | 109 | 59 | eGFR estimated by Schwartz formula | Vancomycin 40–60 mg/kg per day given in 2–4 divided doses; vancomycin clearance estimated | ARC defined as eGFR ≥ 160 mL/min/1.73 m2 Febrile neutropenia is an independent risk factor for ARC Age and eGFR significantly associated with vancomycin clearance ( |
| Kawano et al. [ | Prospective observational | 67 (53–77) | ICU (Japan) | 111 | 56 | Not reported | Measured 8-h CrCl | 39% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min/1.73 m2) Age < 63 years was identified as a risk factor for ARC |
| Roberts et al. [ | Prospective PK study | 61 ± 17 | Patients treated with levofloxacin | 18 | 67 | Estimated using CG 70 ± 67 | Doses of levofloxacin 500 and 750 mg daily have been used; Monte-Carlo simulation conducted to determine PTA in ICU cohort compared to non ICU ones | For CrCl > 130 and CrCl > 200, levofloxacin 1000 mg Q24H provided the highest target attainment for For H. |
| De Cock et al. [ | Prospective PK study | 2.6 (range 0.08–15) | Pediatric ICU | 50 | 60 | Not reported | Population PK of amoxicillin/clavulanate in pediatric ICU population; Conventional dosing of 25–35 mg/kg every 6 h was tested. | In ARC patients; the best dosing is 25 mg/kg over 1 h every 4 h; it produced the best median target attainment by Monte-Carlo Simulation |
| De Waele et al. [ | Retrospective observational | 62 (50–72) | ICU | 1081 | 63 | ARC: 178 (140–243) | Measured 24-h CrCl and ARC risk factors determined | 56% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min): mainly younger and less likely to be treated with vasopressors Continuous ARC was present in 33% of patients ARC incidence 37 per 100 ICU patient-days |
| Dias et al. [ | Retrospective observational | Mean 42 (range 20–66) | ICU (TBI patients) | 18 | 89 | CG method 199 (Range 62–471) | Cerebrovascular pressure reactivity index (PRx) correlated with CrCl | A strong negative correlation between CG CrCl and PRX ( This correlation suggests that reduction in cerebral autoregulation (i.e., after TBI) is associated with an increase in creatinine clearance. |
| Huttner et al. [ | Prospective observational | ARC: 41 ± 12 | ICU with CrCl ≥ 60 mL/min | 100 | 75 | Estimated with CG | They determined the influence of ARC on patient outcome; Standard dose antibiotic regimens given (imipenem/cilastatin 500 mg IV QID; meropenem 2 g IV TID; piperacillin/tazobactam 4.5 g IV TID; cefepime 2 g IV BID) | 64% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min); mainly younger ARC predicted undetectable antimicrobials concentrations but was not correlated with clinical failure |
| Morbitzer et al. [ | Retrospective observational | CN: 44 (29–52) | ICU (TBI) | 27 | 63 | Estimated using CG | Vancomycin pharmacokinetics compared in patients with CN (T = 36–37 C), TH (T=33–34 C) or pentobarbital infusion | Vancomycin clearance was higher in controlled normothermic patients compared to predicted values based on population parameters |
| Ruiz et al. [ | Prospective observational | ARC: 39 ± 16 | ICU (patients with normal SCr) | 360 | ARC: 75 | ARC: 173 ± 44 | Measured 24-h CrCl compared with 4 formulas to estimate CrCl/GFR (CG, Robert, MDRD and CKD-EPI methods) | 33% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min/1.73 m2): mainly trauma patients; younger Different formulas tended to overestimate CrCl for low eGFR values and underestimate CrCl for normal and high eGFRs Three factors suggested to identify ARC: Age ≤ 58 years, trauma and eGFR > 108.1 mL/min/1.73 m2 as calculated by CKD-EPI |
| Spadaro et al. [ | Retrospective observational | Group A: 63 ± 11 | ICU | 348 | Group A: 73 | Group A: 106 ± 41 | Vancomycin administration protocol based on measured 24 h CrCl and vancomycin serum measurements; levels compared between two groups: A (CrCl > 50) and B (CrCl ≤ 50) | 66% of patients had subtherapeutic vancomycin on second determination ARC and increased to 80% on third determination Patients who had a subtherapeutic vancomycin levels at the first determination had a significant correlation with in-hospital mortality (OR = 2, |
| Steinke et al. [ | Prospective observational | 66 (57–74) | ICU | 100 | 61 | 73 (47–107) | Measured CrCl compared with estimated CrCl using serum cystatin C Hoek formula, CG, and CKD-EPI | 16% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min/1.73 m2): mainly trauma patients; TBI or SAH The Hoek formula’s precision was higher than CG and CKD-EPI Authors suggested more studies are needed to identify the rule of Hoek’s formula in drug dosing. |
| Adnan et al. [ | Prospective observational | 34 (24–47) | ICU patients with SCr < 120 µmol/L) | 49 | 76 | ARC: 173 (141–223) | Measured 24-h CrCl compared with CG method | 39% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min) CG method significantly underestimated CrCl in ARC patients |
| Akers et al. [ | Prospective observational | 45 ± 19 | ICU | 13 | 62 | Not reported | They determined the ability of the ARC score to predict piperacillin/tazobactam clearance; Piperacillin/tazobactam doses given were (3.375 g IV Q6H or 4.5 g Q6H) | ARC score had sensitivity 100%, specificity 71% in detecting enhanced clearance of piperacillin/tazobactam |
| Baptista et al. [ | Prospective observational | ARC: 49 ± 15 | ICU patients with normal SCr | 54 | ARC: 64 | ARC Patients: 161 ± 28 | Measured 8-h CrCl compared with CG method, CKD-EPI, and MDRD | 56% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min) All formulas underestimated 8h-CrCl for values >120 mL/min/1.73 m2 and a overestimated for values <120 mL/min/1.73 m2 |
| Baptista et al. [ | Prospective observational (Group 1 data were retrospectively collected) | Group 1: 58 ± 16 | ICU | G 1: 79 | Group 1: 66 | Group 1: 125 ± 67 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Continuous infusion Vancomycin dosing nomogram based on 8h measured CrCl was suggested | 36% and 40% of patients identified to have ARC in groups 1 and 2, respectively (CrCl > 130 mL/min/1.73 m2) Vancomycin clearance was significantly proportional to measured CrCl |
| Campassi et al. [ | Prospective observational | ARC: 48 ± 15 | ICU patients with SCr < 115 µmol/L | 363 | ARC: 48 | ARC: 155 ± 33 | CrCl measured by 24 h urine collection; | 28% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 120 mL/min/1.73 m2); generally younger; more trauma and obstetric admissions; lower APACHE II scores 27% of patients who received vancomycin were identified to have ARC and had significantly lower vancomycin levels ( |
| Hites et al. [ | Prospective observational | 61 (18–84) | Non-ICU obese (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2) patients treated with antibiotics | 56 | 50 | 107 (6–389.0) | They assessed the adequacy of serum concentrations of antimicrobials when given to obese individuals; Standard doses of antibiotics given (Cefepime 2 g TID, Piperacillin/tazobactam 4 g QID, Meropenem 1 g TID); Measured 24-h CrCl determined | Low levels of antimicrobials were detected following standard doses. Elevated CrCl was the only predictor of those low concentrations underlining the role of ARC in under-dosing obese individuals. |
| Udy et al. [ | Prospective observational | Mean 37 (95% CI 29 –44) | ICU patients with SCr < 120 µmol/L and age ≤ 60 | 20 | 60 | Mean: 168 (95% CI 139–197) | Measured 24-h CrCl determined; various exogenous markers given to detect changes in nephron physiology | ARC involves increased glomerular filtration, renal tubular secretion of anions and renal tubular reabsorption using various exogenous markers, suggesting that ARC affects many components of the nephron physiology |
| Udy et al. [ | Prospective observational | Mean 54 (95% CI 53–56) | ICU patients with SCr < 120 µmol/L | 281 | 63.3 | Mean: 108 (95% CI 102–115) | Measured 8-h CrCl determined daily | 65% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 120 mL/min/1.73 m2); mainly younger, men, multi-trauma victims, and receiving mechanical ventilation Presence of ICU admission day 1 ARC predicted sustained ARC during ICU stay |
| Carlier et al. [ | Prospective observational | 56 (48–67) | ICU | 61 | 85 | 125 (93–175) | Meropenem or piperacillin/tazobactam were given as extended IV infusions; antibiotics concentrations measured; measured 24 h CrCl determined; Meropenem dose: an IV loading of 1 g over 30 min then 1 g Q8H as extended infusion over 3 h; Piperacillin/tazobactam dose: an IV loading of 4.5 g over 30 min then 4.5 g Q6H extended infusion over 3 h. | 80% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min) Elevated creatinine clearance is an independent predictor for not achieving meropenem and piperacillin/tazobactam target levels |
| Claus et al. [ | Prospective observational | ARC: 54 (44–61) | ICU patients receiving antimicrobial therapies | 128 | ARC: 73 | 98 (57–164) mL/min/1.73 m2 | Measured 8 h-CrCl determined; measuring the effect of ARC on antimicrobial therapy failure | 52% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min/1.73 m2); mainly younger and male 27% of ARC patients had therapeutic failure (poor clinical response to antimicrobial therapy), more often than non-ARC patients (13%) ( |
| Minkute et al. [ | Retrospective observational | ARC: 46 (21–66) | Patients treated with vancomycin | 36 | 80 | Estimated CG | Vancomycin level comparison between ARC and non-ARC groups | 50% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min, using CG) Vancomycin concentrations were lower in ARC group compared to Non-ARC Vancomycin doses up to 44 mg/kg/day were needed in the ARC group to achieve target trough levels. |
| Roberts and Lipman [ | PK study (analysis of Phase III trial data) | 58 ± 15 | ICU patients with pneumonia | 31 | 93 | Estimated by CG | Population PK of doripenem in critically ill. | Doripenem clearance correlated with CrCl and was increased compared to non-ICU patients |
| Shimamoto et al. [ | Retrospective observational | Non-SIRS: 64 | ICU (Septic patients on vancomycin) | 105 | 66 | Using CG | Identified patients who had SIRS and categorized based on the number of SIRS criteria they had (non-SIRS, SIRS-2, 3 and 4); vancomycin CL and CrCL (CG) determined | In patients age < 50: higher SIRS score predicted higher vancomycin clearance In patients age > 50: higher SIRS does not reliably predict higher vancomycin clearance |
| Udy et al. [ | Prospective observational | 42 ± 17 | ICU (trauma, septic, SCr < 110 µmol/L) | 71 | 63 | Mean: 135 ± 52 | They determined the prevalence and risk factors of ARC | 58% of patients identified to have ARC; more in trauma patients; generally younger, males, with lower APACHE II , SOFA and higher cardiac index Three risk factors suggested to predict ARC: age < 50 years, trauma, and SOFA score ≤ 4 (ARC score) |
| Udy et al. [ | Prospective observational | 51 ± 17 | ICU patients with SCr < 121 µmol/L | 110 | 64 | Mean: 125 ± 45 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Measured 8 h CrCl compared to estimated CrCl (CG and CKD-EPI) | CKD-EPI and CG underestimated CrCl in patients with ARC In patients with CKD-EPI eGFR = 60–119 mL/min/1.73 m2, 42% had ARC |
| Baptista et al. [ | Prospective observational | Non-ARC: 70 (52–79) | ICU septic patients on vancomycin | 93 | Non-ARC: 71 | Non-ARC: 70 (58–104) | The effect of ARC on vancomycin PK: ARC patients compared to non-ARC patients; measured 24 h CrCl | Serum vancomycin concentrations in ARC were significantly lower than control group for the 3 days of study |
| Grootaert et al. [ | Retrospective observational | 59 (48–67) | ICU patients with measured CrCl > 120 mL/min (24-h method) | 390 | 63 | 148 (132–172) mL/min/1.73 m2 | Measured 24-h CrCl compared with CG method (CrCl) and 4-variable MDRD method (eGFR) | CG and MDRD underestimated measured CrCl in ARC patients |
| Udy et al. [ | Prospective observational | 53 ± 21 | ICU | 48 | 71 | 134 ± 90 | Measured 8 h CrCl; beta lactam antibiotic concentrations measured | For patients with trough less than MIC and less than 4× MIC: 82 and 72% had CrCl > 130 mL/min/1.73 m2, respectively A 25 mL/min/1.73 m2 increase in CrCl is associated with a 60% reduction in the probability of obtaining a trough concentration ≥ 4×MIC |
| Baptista et al. [ | Retrospective observational (post hoc analysis) | 35 (25–51) | ICU patients with ARC | 86 | 77 | 162 (145–190) mL/min/1.73 m2 | Measured 8-h (Australia) or 24 h (Portugal) CrCl compared with CG, modified CG, 4-variable MDRD and 6-variable MDRD | All CrCl estimates underestimated measured CrCl CG estimates had the greatest sensitivity→identified 62% of cohort with ARC; lower sensitivity observed with 4-variable MDRD (47%) and 6-variable MDRD (29%) formulae |
| Minville et al. [ | Retrospective observational | NPT: 58 ± 17 | ICU | 284 | NPT: 63 | NPT: 85 ± 5 | Measured 24-h CrCl; compared among patients with (NPT) and without polytrauma (PT) | 37% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 120 mL/min; significantly more trauma patients; younger; had lower SAPS II score; males Age and trauma independently correlated to CrCl |
| Spencer et al. [ | Prospective PK study | 54 ± 14 | Neuro ICU | 12 | 42 | 96 ± 32 (estimated, method not reported) | Patients received levetiracetam 500 mg iv every 12 h; levetiracetam levels measured | Levetiracetam clearance was higher in neurocritical care population compared to healthy volunteers (drug clearance directly proportional to estimated CrCl |
| Goboova et al. [ | Case Report | 16 | ICU (Polytrauma and sepsis) | 1 | 100 | Method not reported | Vancomycin initiated at doses of 1 g IV every 12 h then titrated up | A trauma patient who developed ARC later during hospital stay Vancomycin needed to be increased to up to 6 g per day to achieve therapeutic target trough level Vancomycin increased to 2 g Q12H, which produced troughs of 15 mg/L and 10 mg/L Increase in CrCl observed on day 46, vancomycin trough decreased to 5 mg/L, then dose increased to 2 g Q8H (67 mg/kg/day); trough: 19 mg/L |
| Abdul-Aziz et al. [ | Case Report | 36 | ICU (CNS infection) | 1 | 100 | 234 | Days 1–3: Flucloxacillin 2 g IV Q4H | A case report of an ICU patient with CNS infection Presence of ARC (Measured 8 h) lead to difficulty achieving therapeutic flucloxacillin concentration above MIC with conventional dosing (IV 2 g Q4H) A continuous infusion of high dose flucloxaciilin (20 g/day) was required to achieve clinical cure |
| Cook et al. [ | Case Report | 22 | Neuro ICU (TBI) | 1 | 0 | Method not reported 153 | They described a case of ARC leading to subtherapeutic vancomycin and levetiracetam levels | A conventional vancomycin dose 750 mg IV Q12H (17.5 mg/kg/dose) yielded a trough level of 2.2 mg/L (subtherapeutic); dose had to be increased to 1.25 g iv Q8H (29 mg/kg/dose) to achieve a trough of 11 mg/L Levetiracetam dose was increased from 1000 mg IV BID to 1000 mg Q8H to maintain a trough within reference range (usual dose 0.5–1 g iv Q12H) |
| Lonsdale et al. [ | Case Report | 44 | Neuro ICU (SAH with ventriculitis) | 1 | 100 | 375 mL/min/1.73 m2 | They described a case of ARC leading to subtherapeutic vancomycin and meropenem levels | The patient required dose escalation of vancomycin up to 6 g/day (Vancomycin 63 mg/kg/day) in order to achieve therapeutic trough levels (usual dose 45 mg/kg/d for CNS infections) The patient required dose escalation of meropenem up to 2 g every 6 h in order to achieve therapeutic levels (usual dose 2 g iv Q8H for CNS infections) |
| Troger et al. [ | Case Reports | Pt 1: 37 | ICU patients with sepsis | 2 | 100 | Estimated with CG | Described 2 cases of sepsis patients who required high doses of meropenem secondary to ARC | Pt 1: meropenem dose was increased to 2 g IV Q4H × 1 week, trough was still <4 mg/L but procalcitonin decreased and clinical improvement was observed Pt 2: meropenem dose was increased to 2 g Q6H, producing a trough concentration of 8.4 mg/L |
| Udy et al. [ | Case Series | Pt 1: 19 | ICU | 3 | 100 | Pt 1: 224 | Three case reports of patients with ARC | Pt 1: meropenem 1 g Q8H, increased to 2 g Q8H due to undetectable trough serum concentration; pt. still did not have detectable concentration Pt 2: vancomycin doses were increased up to 4 g (44 mg/kg) continuous infusion over 24-h for clinical cure; Meropenem increased to 1 g Q4H to reach target trough Pt 3: Amikacin 1 g daily was increased up to 1.2 g Q12H due to undetectable trough levels |
| Caro et al. [ | Phase I PK study | Range 29–50 | ICU patients with ARC (CrCl ≥ 180 mL/min estimated by CG) | 5 | 40 | Estimated using CG | Determined the PK of ceftolozane/tazobactam in patients with ARC | Study identified higher clearance of ceftolozane/tazobactam in ARC patients compared to non-ARC patients |
| Goboova et al. [ | Retrospective observational | Mean 42 ± 14 | Patients treated with gentamicin | 204 | 78 | Method not reported | Identification of the influence of ARC on gentamicin dosing | 14% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min/1.73 m2; 93% of ARC patients were under-dosed (low peak levels) with standard gentamicin regimens |
| Morbitzer et al. [ | Prospective observational | 63 (56–71) | Neuro ICU (Hemorrhagic stroke) | 17 | 27 | 131 (108–216) mL/min/1.73 m2 | Measured 8-h CrCl compared with CG method; vancomycin trough concentration determined | CG method underestimated CrCl in ARC patients Measured vancomycin trough was lower than predicted |
| Morimoto and Ishikura [ | Prospective observational | Not reported | ICU (Japan) | 33 | Not reported | Not reported | CrCl measured (method not reported) | 39% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min/1.73 m2); mainly younger, less males, had lower APACHE II score and not septic |
| Dunning and Roberts [ | A survey | N/A | N/A | 123 | N/A | N/A | A survey of 123 ICU physicians about antibiotic prescribing and renal function assessment | 15% responded that they would consider modifying the dosage regimen of beta-lactams and vancomycin antimicrobials in patients with ARC This highlights the need for dosing guidance in patients with ARC. |
| Baptista et al. [ | Retrospective observational | Not reported | ICU | 477 | Not reported | Not reported | CrCl measured by 8 h urine collection | 33% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 130 mL/min/1.73 m2) Urinary creatinine > 45 mg/mL and age < 65 are identified as best predictors of ARC (sensitivity 60%, specificity = 88%); specificity increased to 95% by adding BUN < 7 mmol/L |
| May et al. [ | Prospective observational | Not reported | Neuro ICU (SAH) | 20 | Not reported | 326 ± 135 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Measured 24-h CrCl determined; Monte-Carlo Simulation for levetiracetam doses to achieve trough levels ≥ 6 mg/L | Estimated CrCl (method not reported) significantly underestimated CrCl Monte Carlo Simulation suggested that levetiracetam dosing poorly achieved target attainment unless TID was used (as opposed to standard regimen) |
| Vermis et al. [ | Retrospective observational | Not reported | Patients with hematological malignancies | 96 | Not reported | CrCl estimated using CG | Aimed to determine the prevalence of ARC in a hematological population; Vancomycin continuous infusion: loading 15 mg/kg, maintenance 30 mg/kg given and titrated based on levels | Therapeutic vancomycin trough targets were achieved with dose of 42 mg/kg/day in ARC patients (day 5 post initiation) and with 33 mg/kg/day in non-ARC (day 3 post initiation). |
| Weigel et al. [ | Retrospective observational | 55 | ICU patients without renal replacement and receiving vancomycin infusion | 287 | 69 | ARC: MDRD eGFR > 130 | A vancomycin loading dose of 20 mg/kg was given then adjusted by Therapeutic drug monitoring to target 20–25 mg/L; | Subtherapeutic vancomycin levels were more frequent in patients with MDRD > 130 mL/min (55%) i.e., ARC vs. patients with MDRD < 130 mL/min (29%) Higher than conventional vancomycin dosing is recommended in patients with ARC |
| Neves et al. [ | Prospective observational | 55 ± 13 | ICU | 54 | 72 | Mean: 138 | Measured 8-h CrCl compared with CG method | ARC identified in 50% of samples Per subgroup analyses: CrCl > 120 mL/min/1.73 m2, CG underestimated measured CrCl; CrCl < 120 mL/min/1.73 m2, CG overestimated measured CrCl |
| Grootaert et al. [ | Retrospective observational | 66 (56–75) | ICU patients with measured CrCl available | 1317 | 63 | Not reported | Measured 24-h CrCl | 16% of patients identified to have ARC (CrCl > 120 mL/min): mainly younger, taller, have lower BMI and had longer ICU stay 30% patients had at least 1 episode of ARC Relative duration of ARC per patient was 5 days in all pts, and 7 days in antimicrobial group |
| Drust et al. [ | Retrospective observational | Not reported | ICU patients with CrCl > 120 mL/min | 15 | Not reported | >120 | Meropenem plasma concentrations measured | 27% of patients had appropriate meropenem plasma levels 67% of patients required higher doses of meropenem (up to 8 g/day) than recommended |
ANP = atrial natriuretic peptide; APACHE II = Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation; ARC = Augmented Renal Clearance; CG = Cockcroft Gault equation; CKD-EPI = Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology; CN = controlled normothermia; CrCl = creatinine clearance; GFR = glomerular filtration rate; ICU = intensive care unit; IQR = interquartile range; MDRD = modification of diet in renal disease method; MIC = minimum inhibitory concentration; PK = pharmacokinetic; PT = patient; PTA = probability of target attainment; SAH = subarachnoid hemorrhage; SAPS II = Simplified Acute Physiology Score SCr = serum creatinine; SIRS = systemic inflammatory response syndrome; SOFA = sequential organ failure assessment score; TBI = traumatic brain injury; TH = therapeutic hypothermia. Age and CrCl reported in median (IQR) or mean ± SD.
The ARC risk scoring systems.
| ARC Scoring System [ | ARCTIC Scoring System [ | |
|---|---|---|
| Criteria | Age 50 or younger = 6 pts | SCr < 62 µmol/L = 3 pts |
| Interpretation | 0–6 points→low ARC risk | >6 points→high ARC risk |
| Sensitivity | 100% | 84% |
| Specificity | 71% | 68% |
ARC = augmented renal clearance; ARCTIC = augmented renal clearance in trauma intensive Care (ARCTIC); SOFA = sequential organ failure assessment score; SCr = serum creatinine concentration; pt = point; pts = points.
Figure 2Assessment of ICU patients for augmented renal clearance (ARC).
Suggested dosing recommendations of the studied drugs in adult ARC population.
| Drug | Suggested Dosage | Suggestion Basis |
|---|---|---|
| Levetiracetam | Dose: 1000 mg iv Q8H | Monte-Carlo simulation [ |
| Levofloxacin | Dose: 750–1000 mg iv Q24H | Monte-Carlo simulation [ Levofloxacin 1000 mg Q24H provided the highest target attainment for |
| Meropenem | Dose: 2000 mg iv Q8H | A dose of 1 g iv Q8H reported to be inadequate [ Doses up to 8 g per day might be required [ |
| Piperacillin/Tazobactam | Dose: 4.5 mg iv Q6H Extended infusion of the dose over 4 h might be required | Monte-Carlo simulation [ Subtherapeutic serum concentrations have been reported with intravenous doses of piperacillin/tazobactam 4.5 g every eight hours in 61% of the treated patients [ Continuous infusion may not improve treatment outcome [ |
| Vancomycin | Initial loading dose: 25–30 mg/kg followed by a maintenance dose of 45 mg/kg/day in divided doses Q8H or continuous infusion Therapeutic drug monitoring is recommended (target 10–20 mg/L or 15–20 mg/L depending on the indication) | Doses up to 44 mg/kg/day have been reported to be needed in patients with ARC [ Dosage regimens lower than the suggested dosage have resulted in subtherapeutic levels [ A dosing nomogram suggested by Baptista et al. allowed achievement of therapeutic vancomycin levels; average dose was ~47 mg/kg/day in patients with average weight 70 kg and measured CrCl 150 mL/min [ |
ARC = augmented renal clearance; CrCl = creatinine clearance; above recommended doses are based on observational studies and pharmacokinetics simulations. Above doses will need to be tested prospectively to assess its influence on patients’ outcome; for antimicrobials, different doses might be needed based on the susceptibility pattern of the microorganisms.