A review of population pharmacokinetic models of gentamicin in paediatric patients

被引:21
作者
Crcek, Mateja [1 ]
Zdovc, Jurij [1 ]
Kos, Mojca Kerec [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Ljubljana, Fac Pharm, Dept Biopharmaceut & Pharmacokinet, Ljubljana, Slovenia
关键词
gentamicin; modelling; NONMEM; paediatric population; population pharmacokinetics; GLOMERULAR-FILTRATION-RATE; SCHWARTZ EQUATION; INFANTS; PRETERM; PERFORMANCE; CLEARANCE; PREMATURE; CHILDREN; VOLUME;
D O I
10.1111/jcpt.12850
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
What is known and objectives Gentamicin is often used for the treatment of Gram-negative infections. Due to pharmacokinetic variability in paediatric patients, appropriate dosing of gentamicin in the paediatric population is challenging. This article reviews published population pharmacokinetic models of gentamicin in paediatric patients, identifies covariates that significantly influence gentamicin pharmacokinetics, and determines whether there is a consensus on proposed dosing for intravenous gentamicin in this population. Methods The PubMed database was searched for articles published until the end of 2017. If the articles described population pharmacokinetic models of gentamicin in the paediatric population (after intravenous administration of gentamicin), the following data were extracted: type of study, year of publication, population characteristics and number of patients, gentamicin dosing, total number of gentamicin (serum and/or plasma) concentrations, type of population modelling approach, developed model with pharmacokinetic parameters and covariates included. Results and discussion In most of the studies, one- or two-compartment modelling was applied. The mean estimated gentamicin clearance for newborns, infants and the complete paediatric population was 0.048, 0.13 and 0.067 L/h/kg, respectively, and the mean predicted volume of distribution was 0.475, 0.35 and 0.33 L/kg, respectively. The values reflect differences in body composition and kidney maturation within the different paediatric populations. Gentamicin pharmacokinetics were most influenced by age, body size and renal function. What is new and conclusion Based on our review, the authors agree on a prolonged dosing interval for preterm and term newborns (up to 48 hours). However, there was no agreement on proposed dosing with respect to gestational age. In general, the proposed daily doses were lower compared to those initially applied for preterm newborns and comparable to those for term newborns. For infants and children, the dosing interval remained unchanged (24 hours), but the proposed daily doses were higher than actually applied. When differences in the paediatric population are considered and an appropriate population PK model with applicable covariates is applied, dosing can be individualized. In the future, studies of gentamicin pharmacokinetics in paediatric patients should focus on currently underestimated covariates, such as fat-free mass, concomitantly administered drugs, body temperature and critical illness because these can change gentamicin PK considerably. Consequently, different dosing is required and TDM becomes even more important.
引用
收藏
页码:659 / 674
页数:16
相关论文
共 48 条
[1]   Estimation of population pharmacokinetics using the Gibbs sampler [J].
Best, NG ;
Tan, KKC ;
Gilks, WR ;
Spiegelhalter, DJ .
JOURNAL OF PHARMACOKINETICS AND BIOPHARMACEUTICS, 1995, 23 (04) :407-435
[2]   Gentamicin Pharmacokinetics and Monitoring in Pediatric Patients with Febrile Neutropenia [J].
Bialkowski, Sabina ;
Staatz, Christine E. ;
Clark, Julia ;
Lawson, Rachael ;
Hennig, Stefanie .
THERAPEUTIC DRUG MONITORING, 2016, 38 (06) :693-698
[3]  
Bijleveld YA, 2017, ANTIMICROB AGENTS CH, V61, DOI [10.1128/AAC.01304-16, 10.1128/aac.01304-16]
[4]   Altered gentamicin pharmacokinetics in term neonates undergoing controlled hypothermia [J].
Bijleveld, Yuma A. ;
de Haan, Timo R. ;
van der Lee, Hanneke J. H. ;
Groenendaal, Floris ;
Dijk, Peter H. ;
van Heijst, Arno ;
de Jonge, Rogier C. J. ;
Dijkman, Koen P. ;
van Straaten, Henrica L. M. ;
Rijken, Monique ;
Zonnenberg, Inge A. ;
Cools, Filip ;
Zecic, Alexandra ;
Nuytemans, Debbie H. G. M. ;
van Kaam, Anton H. ;
Mathot, Ron A. A. .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 2016, 81 (06) :1067-1077
[5]  
Blackburn SusanTucker., 2013, Maternal, Fetal, Neonatal Physiology: A Clinical Perspective
[6]   The effect of pathophysiology on pharmacokinetics in the critically ill patient - Concepts appraised by the example of antimicrobial agents [J].
Blot, Stijn I. ;
Pea, Federico ;
Lipman, Jeffrey .
ADVANCED DRUG DELIVERY REVIEWS, 2014, 77 :3-11
[7]   Population pharmacokinetics of gentamicin in South African newborns [J].
Botha, JH ;
du Preez, MJ ;
Adhikari, M .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 2003, 59 (10) :755-759
[8]   Simultaneous Pharmacokinetic Modeling of Gentamicin, Tobramycin and Vancomycin Clearance from Neonates to Adults: Towards a Semi-physiological Function for Maturation in Glomerular Filtration [J].
De Cock, Roosmarijn F. W. ;
Allegaert, Karel ;
Brussee, Janneke M. ;
Sherwin, Catherine M. T. ;
Mulla, Hussain ;
de Hoog, Matthijs ;
van den Anker, Johannes N. ;
Danhof, Meindert ;
Knibbe, Catherijne A. J. .
PHARMACEUTICAL RESEARCH, 2014, 31 (10) :2643-2654
[9]   A gentamicin pharmacokinetic population model and once-daily dosing algorithm for neonates [J].
DiCenzo, R ;
Forrest, A ;
Slish, JC ;
Cole, C ;
Guillet, R .
PHARMACOTHERAPY, 2003, 23 (05) :585-591
[10]   Hearing loss in patients with vestibulotoxic reactions to gentamicin therapy [J].
Dobie, RA ;
Black, FO ;
Pezsnecker, SC ;
Stallings, VL .
ARCHIVES OF OTOLARYNGOLOGY-HEAD & NECK SURGERY, 2006, 132 (03) :253-257