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Population pharmacokinetics of flucloxacillin as intermittent bolus infusion in patients with Staphylococcus aureus bloodstream infection. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the population pharmacokinetics of flucloxacillin in patients with Staphylococcus aureus bloodstream infections, addressing the challenge of optimal antibiotic dosing due to variations in patient responses.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 49 patients using non-linear mixed-effects modeling, revealing that most received a standard 2 g dose every 4 hours, with unique findings on drug concentration dynamics, particularly higher unbound fractions in critically ill patients.
  • A web-based app was developed from the model to help optimize flucloxacillin dosing regimens, which is currently undergoing validation in a clinical trial for further testing.

Article Abstract

Background: Optimal antibiotic dosing for Staphylococcus aureus bloodstream infections (BSI) is still controversial. One reason is inter-individual variation in pharmacokinetics, which may be influenced by various patient-related factors, particularly in critically ill patients.

Objectives: To describe the population pharmacokinetics (PopPK) of the antibiotic flucloxacillin in patients with S. aureus BSI. Subsequently, we sought to translate the model into a user-friendly app for generating a priori and a posteriori time-concentration curves and dose recommendations to optimize dosing regimens.

Methods: Total and unbound flucloxacillin concentrations were included from 49 patients from a prospective cohort study conducted during clinical routine, including non-critically ill and critically ill individuals who received intermittent bolus applications. These data were analysed using non-linear mixed-effects modelling.

Results: Most patients (98%) were treated with 2 g of flucloxacillin every 4 h. We developed a joint model that simultaneously described total and unbound concentrations. The model included an allometric effect of glomerular filtration rate on clearance and albumin on the albumin dissociation constant. The latter was especially important, as in our population the unbound fraction was higher at 11.5% (16.7% for critically ill patients) compared with reported values of approximately 5%. Based on our joint model, we developed a web-based app for optimizing dosing regimens of flucloxacillin.

Conclusions: By utilizing data from clinical routine, we were able to create a predictive PopPK model of flucloxacillin and identify influential covariates. The web-based app is currently being validated in a clinical trial.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jac/dkae207DOI Listing

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