In sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), gentamicin is commonly used for severe infections in non-intensive-care-unit (ICU) settings, but pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data for this specific population are lacking. We performed a population pharmacokinetic study in an adult Mozambican non-ICU hospital population treated with gentamicin ( = 48) and developed a pharmacokinetic model using nonlinear mixed-effects modeling. Simulations showed that non-ICU patient populations in SSA may be at substantial risk for underexposure to gentamicin during routine once-daily dosing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: In sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), the highly albumin-bound β-lactam ceftriaxone is frequently used for the empirical treatment of severe bacterial infections. Systemic drug exposure of β-lactams can be altered in critically ill ICU patients, but pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data for non-ICU SSA populations are lacking.
Methods: We performed a population pharmacokinetic study in an adult hospital population in Mozambique, treated with ceftriaxone for presumptive severe bacterial infection from October 2014 to November 2015.
Background: In intensive care (ICU) patients, systemic exposure of β-lactam antibiotics can be altered, and positive clinical outcome is associated with increasing fT > MIC ratios. In sub-Saharan African hospitals, benzylpenicillin (PEN) is frequently used for the empiric treatment of severe pneumococcal infections. Pharmacokinetic data for non-ICU hospitalized populations are lacking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF