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BACKGROUND: Severe bacterial infections remain a major challenge in intensive care units because of their high prevalence and mortality. Adequate antibiotic exposure has been associated with clinical success in critically ill patients. The objective of this study was to investigate the target attainment of standard meropenem dosing in a heterogeneous critically ill population, to quantify the impact of the full renal function spectrum on meropenem exposure and target attainment, and ultimately to translate the findings into a tool for practical application. METHODS: A prospective observational single-centre study was performed with critically ill patients with severe infections receiving standard dosing of meropenem. Serial blood samples were drawn over 4 study days to determine meropenem serum concentrations. Renal function was assessed by creatinine clearance according to the Cockcroft and Gault equation (CLCRCG). Variability in meropenem serum concentrations was quantified at the middle and end of each monitored dosing interval. The attainment of two pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic targets (100%T>MIC, 50%T>4×MIC) was evaluated for minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) values of 2 mg/L and 8 mg/L and standard meropenem dosing (1000 mg, 30-minute infusion, every 8 h). Furthermore, we assessed the impact of CLCRCG on meropenem concentrations and target attainment and developed a tool for risk assessment of target non-attainment. RESULTS: Large inter- and intra-patient variability in meropenem concentrations was observed in the critically ill population (n = 48). Attainment of the target 100%T>MIC was merely 48.4% and 20.6%, given MIC values of 2 mg/L and 8 mg/L, respectively, and similar for the target 50%T>4×MIC. A hyperbolic relationship between CLCRCG (25-255 ml/minute) and meropenem serum concentrations at the end of the dosing interval (C8h) was derived. For infections with pathogens of MIC 2 mg/L, mild renal impairment up to augmented renal function was identified as a risk factor for target non-attainment (for MIC 8 mg/L, additionally, moderate renal impairment). CONCLUSIONS: The investigated standard meropenem dosing regimen appeared to result in insufficient meropenem exposure in a considerable fraction of critically ill patients. An easy- and free-to-use tool (the MeroRisk Calculator) for assessing the risk of target non-attainment for a given renal function and MIC value was developed. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT01793012 . Registered on 24 January 2013.
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Bacteriemia/tratamento farmacológico , Taxa de Depuração Metabólica/fisiologia , Prognóstico , Medição de Risco/métodos , Tienamicinas/uso terapêutico , APACHE , Adulto , Idoso , Antibacterianos/uso terapêutico , Bacteriemia/mortalidade , Estado Terminal/mortalidade , Estado Terminal/terapia , Feminino , Alemanha , Humanos , Unidades de Terapia Intensiva/organização & administração , Testes de Função Renal/métodos , Masculino , Meropeném , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Estudos Prospectivos , Medição de Risco/normasRESUMO
Depending on the ambient pH, ionizable substances are present in varying proportions in their neutral or charged form. The extent to which these two chemical species contribute to the pH-dependant toxicity of ionizable chemicals and whether intracellular ion trapping has a decisive influence in this context is controversially discussed. Against this background, we determined the acute toxicity of 24 ionizable substances at up to 4 different pH values on the embryonic development of the zebrafish, Danio rerio, and supplemented this dataset with additional data from the literature. The LC50 for some substances (diclofenac, propranolol, fluoxetine) differed by a factor of even >103 between pH5 and pH9. To simulate the toxicity of 12 acids and 12 bases, six models to calculate a pH-dependant logD value as a proxy for the uptake of potentially toxic molecules were created based on different premises for the trans-membrane passage and toxic action of neutral and ionic species, and their abilities to explain the real LC50 data set were assessed. Using this approach, we were able to show that both neutral and charged species are almost certainly taken up into cells according to their logD-based distribution, and that both species exert toxicity. Since two of the models that assume all intracellular molecules to be neutral overestimated the real toxicity, it must be concluded, that the toxic effect of a single charged intracellularly present molecule is, on the average, lower than that of a single neutral molecule. Furthermore, it was possible to attribute differences in toxicity at different pH values for these 24 ionizable substances to the respective deltas in logD at these pH levels with high accuracy, enabling particularly a full logD-based model on the basis of logPow as a membrane passage descriptor to be used for predicting potential toxicities in worst-case scenarios from existing experimental studies, as stipulated in the process of registration of chemicals and the definition of Environmental Quality Standards (EQS).
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Propranolol , Peixe-Zebra , Animais , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Propranolol/toxicidade , ÍonsRESUMO
OBJECTIVE: Target-site concentrations obtained via the catheter-based minimally invasive microdialysis technique often exhibit high variability. Catheter calibration is commonly performed via retrodialysis, in which a transformation factor, termed relative recovery (RR), is determined. Leveraging RR values from a rich data set of a very large clinical microdialysis study, promised to contribute critical insight into the origin of the reportedly high target-site variability. The present work aimed (i) to quantify and explain variability in RR associated with the patient (including non-obese vs. obese) and the catheter, and (ii) to derive recommendations on the design of future clinical microdialysis studies. METHODS: A prospective, age- and sex-matched parallel group, single-centre trial in non-obese and obese patients (BMI=18.7-86.9 kg/m2) was performed. 1-3 RR values were obtained in the interstitial fluid of the subcutaneous fat tissue in one catheter per upper arm of 120 patients via the retrodialysis method (nRR=1008) for a panel of drugs (linezolid, meropenem, tigecycline, cefazolin, fosfomycin, piperacillin and acetaminophen). A linear mixed-effects model was developed to quantify the different types of variability in RR and to explore the association between RR and patient body size descriptors. RESULTS: Estimated RR was highest for acetaminophen (69.7%, 95%CI=65.0% to 74.3%) and lowest for piperacillin (40.4%, 95%CI=34.6% to 46.0%). The linear mixed-effects modelling analysis showed that variability associated with the patient (σ=15.9%) was the largest contributor (46.7%) to overall variability, whereas the contribution of variability linked to the catheter (σ=5.55%) was ~1/6 (16.8%). The relative contribution of residual unexplained variability (σ=12.0%, including intracatheter variability) was ~1/3 (36.4%). The limits of agreement of repeated RR determinations in a single catheter ranged from 0.694-1.64-fold (linezolid) to 0.510-3.02-fold (cefazolin). Calculated fat mass affected RR, explaining the observed lower RR in obese (ΔRRmean= -29.7% relative reduction) versus non-obese patients (p<0.001); yet only 15.8% of interindividual variability was explained by this effect. No difference in RR was found between catheters implanted into the left or right arm (p=0.732). CONCLUSIONS: Three recommendations for clinical microdialysis trial design were derived: 1) High interindividual variability underscored the necessity of measuring individual RR per patient. 2) The low relative contribution of intercatheter variability to overall variability indicated that measuring RR with a single catheter per patient is sufficient for reliable catheter calibration. 3) The wide limits of agreement from multiple RR in the same catheter implied an uncertainty of a factor of two in target-site drug concentration estimation necessitating to perform catheter calibration (retrodialysis sampling) multiple times per patient. To allow routine clinical use of microdialysis, research efforts should aim at further understanding and minimising the method-related variability. Optimised study designs in clinical trials will ultimately yield more informative microdialysis data and increase our understanding of this valuable sampling technique to derive target-site drug exposure.
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Cefazolina , Calibragem , Ensaios Clínicos como Assunto , Humanos , Microdiálise , Estudos ProspectivosRESUMO
Background: Linezolid is used for the treatment of soft tissue infections in critically ill patients. However, data for characterizing the pharmacokinetics (PK) and assessing whether effective concentrations are reached at the target site are lacking. We hypothesized that current dosing regimens do not lead to effective concentrations in the plasma and interstitial fluid (ISF) of subcutaneous tissue in obese patients. Methods: As a controlled clinical model, critically ill obese and non-obese patients undergoing intra-abdominal surgery received 600 mg linezolid as a single infusion. Concentrations in the plasma and microdialysate from the ISF of subcutaneous tissue were determined up to 8 h after dosing. Pharmacokinetic analysis was performed by non-compartmental methods. As a therapeutic target, we used fAUC/MIC > 80. Results: Fifteen obese (BMI: 48.7 ± 11.2 kg/m2) and 15 non-obese (23.9 ± 2.1 kg/m2) patients were analyzed. AUC0-8 in ISF decreased by -1.69 mg*h/L (95% CI: -2.59 to -0.79, p < 0.001) for every 10 kg increase in weight. PK in obese patients were characterized by lower maximal plasma concentrations (median 3.8 vs. 8.3 mg/L, p < 0.001) and a higher volume of distribution (41.0 vs. 30.8 L, p < 0.001), and the therapeutic target was not reached for MIC ≥ 1 mg/L in ISF and ≥ 2 mg/L in plasma. Conclusions: Increasing the weight led to a decrease of linezolid concentrations in the plasma and subcutaneous tissue. The current dosing regimen does not seem to produce sufficient concentrations to kill bacteria with MIC ≥ 2 mg/L, especially as empirical antimicrobial therapy in critically ill obese patients.
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The need for pharmacokinetic knowledge about antibiotics directly at the site of infection, typically the interstitial space fluid (ISF) of tissues, is gaining acceptance for effective and safe treatment. One option to acquire such data is the microdialysis technique employing a catheter with a semipermeable membrane inserted directly in the ISF. A prerequisite is catheter calibration, e.g. via retrodialysis, yielding a conversion factor from measured to true ISF concentrations, termed relative recovery. This value can be influenced by various factors. The present investigation assessed the impact of three of them on relative recovery using seven drugs: (I) drug combinations/order, (II) air in the microdialysis system, (III) flow rate changes inherent when using common in vivo microdialysis pumps. All experiments were performed in a standardised in vitro microdialysis system. (I) Relative recovery of single antibiotics (linezolid, meropenem, cefazolin, metronidazole, tigecycline) was determined in microdialysis and retrodialysis settings and compared with values using either antibiotic or antibiotic+analgesic (acetaminophen and metamizole) combinations or single drugs with reversed microdialysis order. For assessing these factors for lower relative recovery values (as in in vivo), these were mimicked by increasing the flow rate for linezolid. (II) For the impact of air, linezolid relative recovery of freshly carbonated solutions was compared to degassed ones in microdialysis and retrodialysis settings. For each condition in (I) and (II), summary statistics of relative recovery were calculated and for the impact of the factors a linear mixed-effect model developed. (III) From samples taken during an automatic flush sequence (15⯵L/min) of an in vivo pump and afterwards switching to the flow rate of 1 and 2⯵L/min for 120â¯min, the time necessary for relative recovery to reach equilibrium was determined. (I) High relative recovery values (flow rate 2⯵L/min: ≥84%; flow rate 5⯵L/min: ≥65%) were observed for all investigated single drugs. Intra- and intercatheter variability ranged from 0.3%-11% and 3%-25%, respectively. Based on these values and on the statistical model, the impact of drug combination versus single drug as well as of reversed order was small with changes in relative recovery of smaller equal 9%. (II) Compared to degassed solutions, relative recovery in carbonated solutions was 23% and 19% lower (relative reduction) in the microdialysis and retrodialysis setting, respectively, with increased intercatheter variability (up to 37%). (III) As expected, relative recovery increased after the flush sequence and was constant 10-15â¯min after the switch to the typical 1 and 2⯵L/min flow rate. Given the intercatheter variability, combinations and the order of drugs showed minor but clinically negligible impact on relative recovery. In contrast, air in the microdialysis catheter/system caused falsely low and inconsistent relative recovery values and must be avoided when performing a trial. Also changes in flow rate at the end of pump flush sequence impacted relative recovery. Hence, a sufficient equilibration time of 10-15â¯min prior to sampling should be implemented in sampling protocols. In vitro microdialysis presents a highly valuable complementary platform to clinical microdialysis studies impacting the design, sampling schedule and data analysis of such trials to gain knowledge of target-site pharmacokinetics for contributing to better informed decisions in the individual patient/special populations in future.
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Analgésicos/análise , Antibacterianos/análise , Microdiálise , Acetaminofen/análise , Catéteres , Dipirona/análise , Combinação de MedicamentosRESUMO
Effective antibiotic dosing is vital for therapeutic success in critically ill patients. This work aimed to develop an algorithm to identify appropriate meropenem dosing in critically ill patients. Population pharmacokinetic (PK) modelling was performed in NONMEM®7.3 based on densely sampled meropenem serum samples (npatientsâ¯=â¯48; nsamplesâ¯=â¯1376) and included a systematic analysis of 27 pre-selected covariates to identify factors influencing meropenem exposure. Using Monte Carlo simulations newly considering the uncertainty of PK parameter estimates, standard meropenem dosing was evaluated with respect to attainment of the pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) target and was compared with alternative infusion regimens (short-term, prolonged, continuous; daily dose, 2000-6000 mg). Subsequently, a dosing algorithm was developed to identify appropriate dosing regimens. The two-compartment population PK model included three factors influencing meropenem pharmacokinetics: the Cockcroft-Gault creatinine clearance (CLCRCG) on meropenem clearance; and body weight and albumin on the central and peripheral volume of distribution, respectively; of these, only CLCRCG was identified as a vital influencing factor on PK/PD target attainment. A three-level dosing algorithm was developed (considering PK parameter uncertainty), suggesting dosing regimens depending on renal function and the level (L) of knowledge about the infecting pathogen (L1, pathogen unknown; L2, pathogen known; L3(-MIC), pathogen and susceptibility known; L3(+MIC), MIC known). Whereas patients with higher CLCRCG and lower pathogen susceptibility required mainly intensified dosing regimens, lower than standard doses appeared sufficient for highly susceptible pathogens. In conclusion, a versatile meropenem dosing algorithm for critically ill patients is proposed, indicating appropriate dosing regimens based on patient- and pathogen-specific information.