| Literature DB >> 33805874 |
Marta Mejías-Trueba1, Marta Alonso-Moreno1, Laura Herrera-Hidalgo2, Maria Victoria Gil-Navarro2.
Abstract
Vancomycin is commonly used as a treatment for neonatal infections. However, there is a lack of consensus establishing the optimal vancomycin therapeutic regimen and defining the most appropriate PK/PD parameter correlated with the efficacy. A recent guideline recommends AUC-guided therapeutic dosing in treating serious infections in neonates. However, in clinical practice, trough serum concentrations are commonly used as a surrogate PKPD index for AUC24. Despite this, target serum concentrations in a neonatal population remain poorly defined. The objective is to describe the relationship between therapeutic regimens and the achievement of clinical or pharmacokinetic outcomes in the neonatal population. The review was carried out following PRISMA guidelines. A bibliographic search was manually performed for studies published on PubMed and EMBASE. Clinical efficacy and/or target attainment and the safety of vancomycin treatment were evaluated through obtaining serum concentrations. A total of 476 articles were identified, of which 20 met the inclusion criteria. All of them evaluated the target attainment, but only two assessed the clinical efficacy. The enormous variability concerning target serum concentrations is noteworthy, which translates into a difficulty in determining which therapeutic regimen achieves the best results. Moreover, there are few studies that analyze clinical efficacy results obtained after reaching predefined trough serum concentrations, this information being essential for clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: clinical efficacy; neonates; review; target attainment; vancomycin
Year: 2021 PMID: 33805874 PMCID: PMC8064372 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics10040347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Study selection flowchart.
Quality assessment of the studies.
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| [ | ROB–2 | L | SC | L | L | SC | SC | ||
Legend: ROBINS–I: Risk of Bias In Non–randomized Studies of Interventions tool. ROB–2: the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool for randomized trials. L = low; M = moderate; S = serious; SC = come concerns; Y = yes; N = no; NA = not applicable; NR = not reported; NI = not informed. Colors: green = low risk; Yellow = moderate or some concerns risk; Orange = serious risk.
Design and target population of each of the identified studies.
| Articles | Main Objective | Design | Main Variable | Target Serum Concentrations and Method of Administration | Target Population | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristics and No. Subjects | Sex | Age: | Current Weight (kg) | Basal Cr (mcmol/L) | Isolates | |||||
| Aguilar MJ 2008 [ | Design and validation of an empirical dosing regimen for vancomycin | Retrospective study (regimen design) and prospective validation | No. of neonates and serum concentrations that reach target levels | Intermittent inf: | Premature: | 1) Male: 43.4% ( | 1) GE 30 ± 3 | 1) 1.3 ± 0.5 | No data | Empirical and targeted therapy |
| Ringenberg T 2015 [ | To assess the percentage of neonates and young infants achieving a trough serum concentration | A multi–institutional retrospective chart review | Percentage of NICU patients achieving a trough serum concentration with initial vancomycin | Intermittent inf: | 141 patients (NICU patients) | Male: 46.1% | GE 28.2 ± 4.1 | 1.602 ± 1.015 | No data | Empirical: 58.6% |
| Dersch–Mills D 2014 [ | To assess the performance of an empirical vancomycin dosing regimen in achieving target trough levels | Retrospective, observational study of vancomycin doses, levels and pharmacokinetics | Percentage of neonates with initial pre–vancomycin levels of <10 mcg/mL, 10–20 mcg/mL and >20 mcg/mL | Intermittent inf: | 153 patients (NICU patients) | No data | 1) Preterm | No data | No data | No data |
| Leroux S | To evaluate | Prospective study | Percentage of neonates with a first therapeutic drug monitoring vancomycin serum concentration achieving the target window | Continuous inf: | 191 patients (NICU patients) | No data | GE: 31.1 ± 4.9 | 1.755 ± 0.873 | 48.6 ± 21.8 | Empirical and targeted therapy |
| Pawlotsky F 1998 [ | To define a new dosage schedule in premature neonates | Prospective study | Mean vancomycin serum concentrations observed and percentage of patients attaining target concentrations at steady state in each group | Continuous inf target steady state: | 53 patients (NICU patients) | No data | 1) GE: 29.2 ± 2.9 | 1) 1.5 ± 0.3 | No data | 75.5% ( |
| Tauzin M | To determine the proportion of neonates achieving an optimal therapeutic vancomycin level and which dosing regimen is the most suitable for neonates | Retrospective study | Proportion of neonates reaching the target vancomycin serum concentration | Continuous inf: | 75 preterm | Male: | GE: 27 (26–30.5) | 1.23 | ( | 73.6% ( |
| Chung E | To evaluate whether vancomycin dosing from published dosing algorithms correlate with the | Retrospective study | Proportion of the first minimum levels within the target therapeutic range, as well as in the subtherapeutic range within therapeutic and subtherapeutic levels | Intermittent inf: | 74 patients | Male: | Therapeutic | Therapeutic | mg/dL: Therapeutic: 0.64 ± 0.25 Subtherapeutic: 0.45 ± 0.18 | 24.3% |
| Radu L | To validate the empirical vancomycin dosage regimen in achieving target troughs | Multisite retrospective before–and–after cohort study | Proportion of neonates achieving target trough levels | Intermittent inf: | 118 patients NICU | No data | EG: 28.4 (26.3–34.3) | 1.814 (0.961) | No data | 80.51% |
| Petrie K | To determine the initial trough level achievement | Retrospective study | Percentage of patients achieving a trough serum concentration with initial vancomycin dosing | Intermittent inf: | 83 patients | No data | EG: 28 | 1.12 | 42 (17–139) | No data |
| Reilly AM | To evaluate the implementation of a new vancomycin dosing guideline in improving trough target attainment | Retrospective study | Percentage of | Intermittent inf: | Old guideline: | No data | Old: | Old: | mg/dL: | 1) 62.6% ( |
| Zhao W 2013 [ | To evaluate the results of vancomycin TDM under three different dosing regimens and to optimize vancomycin therapy | Prospective study: dose optimization multicenter study (three hospitals (1,2,3)) and validation | Percentage ofneonates who achieve goal trough concentrations and concentration range | Continuous inf: | a) Dose optimization: 207 samples | a) Male: 50.87% | a) PNA: 26 ± 25; 17(1,120) | a) Dose optimization: | a) Dose optimization: 1) 46 | No data |
| Matthijs de Hoog | To incorporate new insights in an up–to–date dosing scheme for neonates of various gestational ages | Retrospective study with prospective validation | Number of patients presenting through and peak levels in the different established plasma ranges | Intermittent inf: | PNA < 29 days | No data | Retrospective: | Retrospective group: | No data | Empirical and targeted therapy |
| Sinkeler FS 2014 [ | To assess the percentage of therapeutic initial trough serum concentrations and to evaluate the adequacy of the therapeutic range in interrelationship with the observed MIC–values in neonates | Retrospective study | Total number (and %) of cases with trough concentrations below and above the therapeutic range (10–15 mg/L) | Intermittent inf: | 112 neonates NICU patients | No data | GE: 28 (24–41) | 1.04(0.5– 4.31) | No data | Only patients with Gram–positive isolation were included |
| Madigan T 2015 [ | To compare vancomycin serum trough concentrations and 24–h area under the serum concentration–versus–time curve (AUC24) among very low–birthweight | Retrospective analysis: before and after implementation of a new vancomycin dosing protocol | Vancomycin trough concentrations and predicted AUC24 | Intermittent inf: 10–20 mcg/mL | 57 preterm < 1.5 kg (NICU patients) | Control | Control: | Control: 0.94 (0.47–1.47) | Control: 0.65 | Positive culture Control: 67.9% |
| Badran EF 2011 [ | To evaluatethe pharmacokinetic parameters of vancomycinfrom data collected during regular monitoring of its serum concentrations | Prospective study | Percentage of patients reaching the target levels and pharmacokinetic variables in the different cohorts | Intermittent inf: | 151 neonates (NICU patients): | Male: 57% | 1) Group <28 weeks GE: 26.9 ± 0.4 | No data | No data | No data |
| McDougal A 1995 [ | To estimate the vancomycin pharmacokinetic parameters in a neonatal population and prospectively to evaluate these modified dosage guidelines | Prospective study | Clinical characteristics, pharmacokinetic variables, percentage that reach the target levels | Intermittent inf: | 44 patients | No data | PMA: | Range | No data | Empirical and targeted therapy |
| Patel AD | Compare a dosing regimen with intermittent vs. continuous infusion | Prospective study: | Proportion of patients reaching the target level with the first plasma level | Continuous inf: | 1) 60 courses + 60 courses | No data | 1) Continuous: | Intermittent: 2.2 (1–4) | Intermittent: | 52.9% ( |
| Plan | To evaluate a simplified dosage schedule for continuous–infusion vancomycin therapy | Prospective study: 2 groups | Percentage of patients reaching target levels and bacteriological data | Intermittent inf: 10–25 mcg/mL | 145 premature neonates | 1) Male: 44% | 1) PNA: 11 (7–18) | 1) 0.94 | 1) 70 | 43.45% ( |
| Demirel | To evaluate microbiological outcomes, clinical response and adverse events of vancomycin when administered via continuous intravenous infusion | Retrospective study (2 cohorts, intermittent or continuous intravenous) | Clinical response and microbiological outcomes; percentage of patients reaching target plasma levels | Intermittent inf: | 77 preterm NICU patients (<34 weeks) | 1) Male: 68.3% ( | 1) GE: 29.3±2.9 | No data | 1) –0.1 | 1) Empirical: 53.7% ( |
| Gwee A | To determine if CIV or intermittent infusions of vancomycin better achieves target vancomycin concentrations at the first steady–state level and to compare the frequency of drug–related adverse effects | Multicenter prospective randomized controlled trial: 2 groups | The difference in the proportion ofparticipants achieving target vancomycin levels at their first steady–state level | Continuous inf: | 104 patients | Intermittent: | Intermittent: | Intermittent: | No data | 77.88% ( |
* (2nd creatinine–basal creatinine) mg/dL; *1 population data of patients who meet inclusion criteria (n = 191) GE: gestational age; PNA: postnatal age; PMA: postmenstrual age; N/A: not applicable; Cr: creatinine.
Dosage regimen used and main findings of each of the identified studies.
| Dosage Regimen Used | Main Findings | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Articles | Variables Involved | Loading Dose | Maintenance dose | Clinics /Levels in Therapeutic Range | Infra /Supratherapeutic | Security |
| Aguilar MJ | Weight and age (PNA) | N/A | 1) 10 mg/kg e/12 h | Validation ( | Validation ( | No data |
| Ringenberg T | Age (PMA and PNA) | N/A | 10 mg/kg e/18 h | No nephrotoxicity 2 patients: reversible 50% increase in their creatinine. | ||
| Dersch–Mills D | Weight and age (PNA) | N/A | 15 mg/kg e/24 h | 15% (n = 3) | I: 85%; S: 0% | No data |
| Leroux S | Birth weight (g), current weight (g), PNA (days), creatinine (mcmol/L) | Target [ ] × Vd | Target × CL × 24 h | No nephrotoxicity | ||
| Pawlotsky F | Age (PMA) | Cohort 1: | Cohort 1: | Cohort 1: | Cohort 1: | No cases of hypotension, flushing, red man syndrome. |
| Tauzin M | N/A | 15 mg/kg | 30 mg/kg/d | No data | ||
| Chung E | Age (PMA and PNA) | N/A | 10 to 15 mg/kg e/18 h | No data | ||
| Radu L | Age (PMA and PNA) | N/A | 15 mg/kg e/18 h | 38.71% ( | I: 61.25%; S: 0% | No data |
| Petrie K | Age (PMA) | N/A | 15 mg/kg e/24 h | Level 10–15 mcg/mL: | < 10 mcg/mL: 81% | No data |
| Reilly AM | Age (PMA and PNA) | N/A | Old | All: 28.6% ( | I: 69.2% ( | Old guideline: |
| Zhao W | Age (GA and PNA) | a) | NRF: 20 IRF: 15 | a) Dose optimization: the results broken down by hospitals are not provided: | a) Dose optimization: | No data |
| Matthijs de Hoog | N/A | N/A | Retrospective: | No data | ||
| Sinkeler FS | Age (GA and/or PMA and/or PNA) | N/A | 15 mg/kg e/24 h | No data | ||
| Madigan T | Control: | N/A | Control: | Control: | Control: | Nephrotoxicity: |
| Badran EF | Age (PMA and PNA) | N/A | 10 mg/kg e/18 h | Peak: 20–40 mcg/mL: | Peak: | Nephrotoxicity and ototoxicity from vancomycin in this study are unlikely |
| McDougal A | Weight and age (PMA) | N/A | 1)18 mg/kg e/36 h | 1) 0% ( | 1) I: 0%; S: 0% | No adverse effects. |
| Patel AD | Creatinine +/– age (PMA) | Inter. inf: | Inter. inf: | Inter. inf: | Inter. inf: | No adverse effects. |
| Plan 2008 [ | Creatinine | N/A | 1) 25 mg/kg/day | 1) 10–25 mcg/mL: | 1) <10 mcg/mL: 24% | Nephrotoxicity was not evaluated. |
| Demirel | Age (PMA and PNA) | Group 1: N/A | Group 1 | Clinical failure: | Plasma levels: | No adverse effects in any groups. All the infants passed the hearing–screening tests. |
| Gwee A | Inter. inf: age (PMA) | Inter. inf: No loading dose | Inter. inf: | Inter. inf: | Inter. inf: | There were no differences in increased creatinine levels or toxicity between groups. |
GE: gestational age; PNA: postnatal age; PMA: postmenstrual age; N/A: not applicable; Inter. inf; intermittent infusion; Cont. inf: continuous infusion; T: trough; P: peak; I: infratherapeutic; S: supratherapeutic; NRF: normal renal function; IRF: impaired renal function; P: peak; T: Trough; CoNS: coagulase–negative staphylococci.
Detailed search strategy.
| Database | Search Strategy |
|---|---|
| PubMed | (“vancomycin”[MeSH Terms] OR “vancomycin”[All Fields]) AND (“infant, newborn”[MeSH Terms] OR (“infant”[All Fields] AND “newborn”[All Fields]) OR “newborn infant”[All Fields] OR “neonates”[All Fields]) AND (“pharmacokinetics”[Subheading] OR “pharmacokinetics”[All Fields] OR “pharmacokinetics”[MeSH Terms]) |
| EMBASE | (“vancomycin”/exp OR vancomycin) AND neonates AND (“pharmacokinetics”/exp OR pharmacokinetics) |