4.2 Article

Prolonged administration of β-lactam antibiotics - a comprehensive review and critical appraisal

Journal

SWISS MEDICAL WEEKLY
Volume 146, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

E M H SWISS MEDICAL PUBLISHERS LTD
DOI: 10.4414/smw.2016.14368

Keywords

sepsis; beta-lactam antibiotic; continuous infusion; pharmacokinetics; pharmacodynamics

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [APP1048652, APP1044941]
  2. Centre for Research Excellence [APP1099452]
  3. University of Basel
  4. Fondation Machaon

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Prolonged infusion of beta-lactam antibiotics as either extended (over at least 2 hours) or continuous infusion is increasingly applied in intensive care units around the world in an attempt to optimise treatment with this most commonly used class of antibiotics, whose effectiveness is challenged by increasing resistance rates. The pharmacokinetics of beta-lactam antibiotics in critically ill patients is profoundly altered secondary to an increased volume of distribution and the presence of altered renal function, including augmented renal clearance. This may lead to a significant decrease in plasma concentrations of beta-lactam antibiotics. As a consequence, low pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) target attainment, which is described as the percentage of time that the free drug concentration is maintained above the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the causative organism (fT(>MIC)), has been documented for beta-lactam treatment in these patients when using standard intermittent bolus dosing, even for the most conservative target (50% fT(>MIC)). Prolonged infusion of beta-lactams has consistently been shown to improve PK/PD target attainment, particularly in patients with severe infections. However, evidence regarding relevant patient outcomes is still limited. Whereas previous observational studies have suggested a clinical benefit of prolonged infusion, results from two recent randomised controlled trials of continuous infusion versus intermittent bolus administration of beta-lactams are conflicting. In particular, the larger, double-blind placebo-controlled randomised controlled trial including 443 patients did not demonstrate any difference in clinical outcomes. We believe that a personalised approach is required to truly optimise beta-lactam treatment in critically ill patients. This may include therapeutic drug monitoring with real-time adaptive feedback, rapid MIC determination and the use of antibiotic dosing software tools that incorporate patient parameters, dosing history, drug concentration and site of infection. Universal administration of beta-lactam antibiotics as prolonged infusion, even if supported by therapeutic drug monitoring, is not yet ready for prime time, as evidence for its clinical benefit is modest. There is a need for prospective randomised controlled trials that assess patientcentred outcomes (e. g. mortality) of a personalised approach in selected critically ill patients including prolonged infusion of beta-lactams compared with the current standard of care.

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