Hall Ronald G, Payne Kenna D, Bain Amy M, Rahman Anita P, Nguyen Sean T, Eaton Susan A, Busti Anthony J, Vu Stephen L, Bedimo Roger
Department of Pharmacy Practice, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, School of Pharmacy, Dallas, Texas, USA.
Am J Med. 2008 Jun;121(6):515-8. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2008.01.046.
There is a paucity of data available regarding the dosing of antimicrobials in obesity. However, data are available demonstrating that vancomycin should be dosed on the basis of actual body weight.
This study was conducted at 2 tertiary care medical centers that did not have pharmacy-guided vancomycin dosing programs or other institutional vancomycin dosing policies or protocols. Patients who received vancomycin between July 1, 2003, and June 30, 2006, were stratified by body mass index and randomly selected from the computer-generated queries. Patients >or=18 years of age with a creatinine clearance of at least 60 mL/min who received vancomycin for at least 36 hours were included.
Data were collected on a random sampling of 421 patients, stratified by body mass index, who met the inclusion criteria. Most patients in each body mass index category received a fixed dose of vancomycin 2 g daily divided into 2 doses (underweight 82%, normal weight 90%, overweight 86%, and obese 91%). Adequate initial dosing (>or=10 mg/kg/dose) was achieved for 100% of underweight, 99% of normal weight, 93.9% of overweight, and 27.7% of obese patients (P < .0001). Ninety-seven percent of underweight, 46% of normal weight, 1% of overweight, and 0.6% of obese patients received >or=15 mg/kg/dose recommended by several Infectious Diseases Society of America guidelines. Pharmacists also failed to correct inadequate dosing because only 3.3% of patients receiving less than 10 mg/kg/dose had their regimen changed in the first 24 hours of therapy.
In this multicenter pilot study, obese patients routinely received inadequate empiric vancomycin using a lenient assessment of dosing. Greater efforts should be undertaken to ensure patients receive weight-based dosing because inadequate dosing can lead to subtherapeutic concentrations and potentially worse clinical outcomes.
关于肥胖患者抗菌药物的给药剂量,现有数据较少。然而,有数据表明万古霉素应以实际体重为依据给药。
本研究在2家三级医疗中心开展,这两家中心没有药学指导的万古霉素给药方案或其他机构性万古霉素给药政策或规程。2003年7月1日至2006年6月30日期间接受万古霉素治疗的患者按体重指数分层,并从计算机生成的查询中随机选取。纳入年龄≥18岁、肌酐清除率至少为60 mL/分钟且接受万古霉素治疗至少36小时的患者。
收集了符合纳入标准的421例按体重指数分层的随机抽样患者的数据。每个体重指数类别中的大多数患者接受固定剂量的万古霉素,每日2 g,分2剂给药(体重过轻患者为82%,正常体重患者为90%,超重患者为86%,肥胖患者为91%)。体重过轻患者中有100%、正常体重患者中有99%、超重患者中有93.9%、肥胖患者中有27.7%实现了足够的初始给药剂量(≥10 mg/kg/剂)(P <.0001)。体重过轻患者中有97%、正常体重患者中有46%、超重患者中有1%、肥胖患者中有0.6%接受了美国传染病学会多项指南推荐的≥15 mg/kg/剂的剂量。药剂师也未能纠正给药不足的情况,因为在治疗的头24小时内,接受剂量低于10 mg/kg/剂的患者中只有3.3%的治疗方案得到了更改。
在这项多中心试点研究中,肥胖患者在使用宽松的给药评估时,常规接受的经验性万古霉素剂量不足。应做出更大努力以确保患者接受基于体重的给药,因为给药不足会导致治疗浓度不足,并可能导致更差的临床结果。