Literature DB >> 31337992

Use of Body Surface Area for Dosing of Vancomycin.

Elizabeth L Sawrey, Mary W Subramanian, Kacy A Ramirez, Brandy S Snyder, Brittany B Logston, Gregory B Russell.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Vancomycin weight-based dosing regimens often fail to achieve therapeutic trough serum concentration in children ≤12 years of age and rigorous studies evaluating efficacy and safety of body surface area (BSA)-based dosing regimens have not been performed. We compared vancomycin trough serum concentrations in pediatric patients receiving a weight- or BSA-based dosing regimen.
METHODS: This was a single-center, retrospective study evaluating pediatric patients, ages 1 to 12 years, who received vancomycin from September 2012 to October 2015. Patients received a minimum of 3 consecutive doses at the same scheduled interval within a dosing regimen prior to a measured vancomycin serum trough concentration. The primary outcome was percentage of initial vancomycin trough concentrations ≥10 mg/L. The secondary outcomes were percentage of supratherapeutic, therapeutic, and subtherapeutic vancomycin serum concentration for all patients, including a subset of overweight and obese patients, and number of nephrotoxic occurrences.
RESULTS: BSA-based dosing regimens resulted in 50% of the initial vancomycin trough concentrations ≥ 10 mg/L compared with 17% for the weight-based dosing regimens (p < 0.0001). No statistically significant differences were noted between the 2 dosing regimens for supratherapeutic, therapeutic, or subtherapeutic trough concentrations for all patients, and for the subset of overweight and obese patients. Nephrotoxic occurrences were noted in 7% of the weight-based dosing regimens compared with none in the BSA-based dosing regimens.
CONCLUSIONS: A BSA-based vancomycin dosing regimen resulted in significantly more initial vancomycin trough concentrations ≥10 mg/L and trended towards higher initial vancomycin trough concentrations without observable nephrotoxicity.

Entities:  

Keywords:  antibiotic dosing; body surface area; pediatrics; therapeutic drug monitoring; vancomycin

Year:  2019        PMID: 31337992      PMCID: PMC6633278          DOI: 10.5863/1551-6776-24.4.296

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pediatr Pharmacol Ther        ISSN: 1551-6776


  1 in total

1.  A proof of concept using the Ussing chamber methodology to study pediatric intestinal drug transport and age-dependent differences in absorption.

Authors:  Eva J Streekstra; Márton Kiss; Jeroen van den Heuvel; Johan Nicolaï; Petra van den Broek; Sanne M B I Botden; Martijn W J Stommel; Lara van Rijssel; Anna-Lena Ungell; Evita van de Steeg; Frans G M Russel; Saskia N de Wildt
Journal:  Clin Transl Sci       Date:  2022-08-12       Impact factor: 4.438

  1 in total

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