| Literature DB >> 35359889 |
Ronaldo Morales Junior1,2, Gabriela Otofuji Pereira1, Gustavo Magno Baldin Tiguman3, Vanessa D'Amaro Juodinis2, João Paulo Telles4, Daniela Carla de Souza2,5, Silvia Regina Cavani Jorge Santos1.
Abstract
The antimicrobial therapy of sepsis and septic shock should be individualized based on pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) parameters to deliver effective and timely treatment of life-threatening infections. We conducted a literature scoping review to identify therapeutic targets of beta-lactam antibiotics in septic pediatric patients and the strategies that have been applied to overcome sepsis-related altered pharmacokinetics and increase target attainment against susceptible pathogens. A systematic search was conducted in the MEDLINE, EMBASE and Web of Science databases to select studies conducted since 2010 with therapeutic monitoring data of beta-lactams in septic children. Last searches were performed on 02 September 2021. Two independent authors selected the studies and extracted the data. A narrative and qualitative approach was used to summarize the findings. Out of the 118 identified articles, 21 met the eligibility criteria. Population pharmacokinetic modeling was performed in 12 studies, while nine studies reported data from bedside monitoring of beta-lactams. Most studies were conducted in the United States of America (n = 9) and France (n = 5) and reported PK/PD data of amoxicillin, ampicillin, azlocillin, aztreonam, cefazolin, cefepime, cefotaxime, ceftaroline, ceftazidime, doripenem, meropenem and piperacillin/tazobactam. Therapeutic targets ranged from to 40% fT> MIC to 100% fT> 6 × MIC. Prolonging the infusion time and frequency were most described strategies to increase target attainment. Monitoring beta-lactam serum concentrations in clinical practice may potentially maximize therapeutic target attainment. Further studies are required to define the therapeutic target associated with the best clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: beta-lactams; pediatrics; pharmacodynamics; pharmacokinetics; sepsis; therapeutic drug monitoring
Year: 2022 PMID: 35359889 PMCID: PMC8960241 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2022.777854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Search strategy.
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| (((pediatric[MeSH Terms]) OR (child[MeSH Terms]) OR (children[MeSH Terms]) OR pediatri* OR paediatr*) AND ((sepsis[MeSH Terms]) OR (septicemia[MeSH Terms]) OR (septic shock[MeSH Terms])) AND ((beta lactam[MeSH Terms]) OR (beta-lactam[MeSH Terms]) OR (β-lactam[MeSH Terms])) AND ((therapeutic drug monitoring[MeSH Terms]) OR (drug monitoring[MeSH Terms]) OR (drug concentration) OR (plasma concentration) OR (serum concentration))). |
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| ('child'/exp OR pediatri* OR paediatr*) AND ('sepsis'/exp OR 'septicemia'/exp OR 'septic shock'/exp) AND 'beta lactam'/exp AND ('drug monitoring'/exp OR 'drug concentration' OR 'plasma concentration' OR 'serum concentration'). |
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| (((pediatric) OR (child) OR (children) OR pediatri* OR paediatr*) AND ((sepsis) OR (septicemia) OR (septic shock)) AND ((beta lactam) OR (beta-lactam) OR (β-lactam)) AND ((therapeutic drug monitoring) OR (drug monitoring) OR (drug concentration) OR (plasma concentration) OR (serum concentration))). |
Figure 1Flowchart describing the study selection process.
Characteristics of the included papers.
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| De Cock et al. ( | Belgium | Population PK study | ICU Patients between 1 month and 15 years | 50 | 0.21 mg/dL | Amoxicillin-clavulanic acid | 40% | 8 mg/L | 25 mg/kg q4h (1 h-infusion) | To shorten the interval and extend infusion duration |
| Mir et al. ( | Pakistan | Prospective cohort | Infants <59 days of age | 20 | NR | Amoxicillin | 50% | 2 mg/L | 75–100 mg/ kg/day (oral) | To increase the dose |
| Ericson et al. ( | United States of America | Retrospective cohort | Infants <28 days of age | 1272 | 0.2–2.5 mg/dL | Ampicillin | 50% | 8 mg/L | ≥75mg/kg/dose every 6 or 8 h) | To increase the dose and shorten the interval |
| Wu et al. ( | China | Population PK study | preterm and term infants ≤ 72h old | 45 | NR | Azlocillin | 70% | 8 mg/L | 100 mg/kg q6-8h (0.5h-infusion) | To shorten the interval |
| Cies et al. ( | United States of America | Population PK study | ICU patients between 9 months and 6 years | 13 | NR | Piperacillin-tazobactam | 50% | 16 mg/L | 100 mg/kg q6h (3h- infusion); 400 mg/kg/day CI | To extend infusion duration |
| Nichols et al. ( | United States of America | Population PK study | ICU patients between 9 months and 11 years | 12 | 103 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Piperacillin-tazobactam | (a) 50% | 16 mg/L | (a) 80-100 mg/kg q8h (4h-infusion) (b) None of the tested regimens | To extend infusion duration |
| De Cock et al. ( | Belgium | Population PK study | ICU patients between 1 month and 15 years | 47 | 109 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Piperacillin-tazobactam | 60% | 16 mg/L | 75-100 mg/kg q4h (1-2h-infusion); 300 mg/kg/day CI | To increase the dose and shorten the interval |
| Beranger et al. ( | France | Population PK study | All children aged <18 years | 50 | 142 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Piperacillin-tazobactam | (a) 50% | 16 mg/L | (a) 75-100 mg/kg q6–8 (3–4 h-infusion) (b) NR (c) 75–100 mg/kg/day CI (d) NR | To extend infusion duration |
| Chongcharoenyanon et al. ( | Thailand | Prospective randomized trial | ICU Patients between 1 month and 18 years | 90 | NR | Piperacillin-tazobactam | (a) 50% | 16 mg/L | 100 mg/kg q8 h (4 h-infusion) | To extend infusion duration |
| Leroux et al. ( | France | Population PK study | Neonates and young infants (postmenstrual age under 44 weeks) | 100 | 0.49 mg/dL | Cefotaxime | 75% | 2 mg/L | 50 mg/kg q6–12 h (0.25–0.5 h infusion) | To shorten the interval |
| Beranger et al. ( | France | Population PK study | All children aged <18 years | 49 | 171 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Cefotaxime | (a) 100% | 0.5 mg/L | 100 mg/kg/day CI | To extend infusion duration |
| Hartman et al. ( | Netherlands | Secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial | ICU Patients between 1 month and 18 years | 37 | 0.46 mg/dL | Cefotaxime | (a) 100% | 2 mg/L | NR | None |
| Bui et al. ( | France | Population PK study | ICU Patients between 28 days and 12 years | 108 | 198 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Ceftazidime | (a) 60% | 8 mg/L | 90-150 mg/kg/day CI | To extend infusion duration |
| Li et al. ( | China | population PK study | Neonates and young infants (postmenstrual age under 48 weeks) | 146 | 0.38 mg/dL | Ceftazidime | 70% | 8 mg/L | 25–30 mg/kg q8/12 (infusion duration NR) | To increase the dose and shorten the interval |
| Yasmin et al. ( | United States of America | Case report | 4-year-old child | 1 | 77.4 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Ceftazidime-Avibactam and aztreonam | 100% | 8 mg/L | NR | TDM and antibiotic synergy |
| Cies et al. ( | United States of America | Case series | ICU Patients between 1 year and 13 years | 7 | >60 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Ceftaroline | 40% | 2 mg/L | NR | TDM |
| Cies et al. ( | United States of America | Case report | 2-year-old girl | 1 | 157 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Meropenem | 40% | 8 mg/L | NR | TDM |
| Cies et al. ( | United States of America | Population PK study | ICU Patients between 1 year and 15 years | 9 | 168 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Meropenem | (a) 40% | 2 mg/L | 40 mg/kg q6–8 h (3-4h infusion); 120 mg/kg q24 h CI | To extend infusion duration |
| Cies et al. ( | United States of America | Case report | 16-year-old boy | 1 | NR | Aztreonam | 40% | 16 mg/L | NR | To extend infusion duration |
| Cies et al. ( | United States of America | Retrospective cohort | All children aged <18 years | 82 | >60 mL/min/1.73 m2 | Ampicillin, cefazolin, cefepime, cefotaxime, ceftaroline, doripenem, meropenem, piperacillin/tazobactam | (a) 40% | NR | NR | TDM |
Susceptibility breakpoint considered by the study.
PK, pharmacokinetics; PD, pharmacodynamics; ICU, intensive care unit; PTA, percentage of target attainment; TDM, therapeutic drug monitoring; fT>MIC, time that free concentrations remain above the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) as a function of the dosing interval; NR, not reported; CI, continuous infusion.