| Literature DB >> 34460303 |
Vesa Cheng1,2, Mohd H Abdul-Aziz1, Fay Burrows3, Hergen Buscher4,5, Young-Jae Cho6, Amanda Corley7, Arne Diehl8, Eileen Gilder9, Stephan M Jakob10, Hyung-Sook Kim11, Bianca J Levkovich12, Sung Yoon Lim6, Shay McGuinness9, Rachael Parke9,13, Vincent Pellegrino8, Yok-Ai Que10, Claire Reynolds4, Sam Rudham4, Steven C Wallis1, Susan A Welch3, David Zacharias10, John F Fraser2,14,15,16, Kiran Shekar2,14,15,16, Jason A Roberts1,17,18.
Abstract
Our study aimed to describe the population pharmacokinetics (PK) of piperacillin and tazobactam in patients on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), with and without renal replacement therapy (RRT). We also aimed to use dosing simulations to identify the optimal dosing strategy for these patient groups. Serial piperacillin and tazobactam plasma concentrations were measured with data analyzed using a population PK approach that included staged testing of patient and treatment covariates. Dosing simulations were conducted to identify the optimal dosing strategy that achieved piperacillin target exposures of 50% and 100% fraction of time free drug concentration is above MIC (%fT>MIC) and toxic exposures of greater than 360 mg/liter. The tazobactam target of percentage of time free concentrations of >2 mg/liter was also assessed. Twenty-seven patients were enrolled, of which 14 patients were receiving concurrent RRT. Piperacillin and tazobactam were both adequately described by two-compartment models, with body mass index, creatinine clearance, and RRT as significant predictors of PK. There were no substantial differences between observed PK parameters and published parameters from non-ECMO patients. Based on dosing simulations, a 4.5-g every 6 hours regimen administered over 4 hours achieves high probabilities of efficacy at a piperacillin MIC of 16 mg/liter while exposing patients to a <3% probability of toxic concentrations. In patients receiving ECMO and RRT, a frequency reduction to every 12 hours dosing lowers the probability of toxic concentrations, although this remains at 7 to 9%. In ECMO patients, piperacillin and tazobactam should be dosed in line with standard recommendations for the critically ill.Entities:
Keywords: ECMO; antibiotics; continuous renal replacement therapy; dosing; neurotoxicity; penicillin; pharmacokinetics
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34460303 PMCID: PMC8522760 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.01438-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Agents Chemother ISSN: 0066-4804 Impact factor: 5.191