Kenyon C F, Knoppert D C, Lee S K, Vandenberghe H M, Chance G W
Department of Pediatrics, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 1990 Feb;34(2):265-8. doi: 10.1128/AAC.34.2.265.
The pharmacokinetics of amikacin administered intravenously at currently recommended doses (7.5 mg/kg every 12 h for infants with less than 7 days of life; 7.5 mg/kg every 8 h for infants with greater than 7 days of life) were studied in 28 preterm infants weighing less than 2,500 g (mean +/- standard deviation, 1.38 +/- 0.47 kg; postconceptional age, 30.50 +/- 2.86 weeks). The medication was infused over 45 min. Trough and peak serum samples as well as two additional samples were taken at steady state. The results showed a statistically significant inverse relationship between half-life (8.42 +/- 2.55 h) and postconceptional age (P = 0.002) and a direct correlation between total body clearance (0.84 +/- 0.28 ml/min per kg) and postconceptional age (P = 0.02). These pharmacokinetic data were used to calculate a new dosage schedule for preterm infants. The derived intravenous dosage of amikacin for infants of less than 30 weeks of postconceptional age was 9 mg/kg every 18 h. For infants of greater than 30 weeks of postconceptional age, the dosage was 9 mg/kg every 12 h. Peak and trough levels of amikacin in serum that fell within the therapeutic range were compared by using the currently recommended dosage schedule and the dosage schedule derived from our pharmacokinetic data. There was a reduction in the number of peak and trough levels that fell outside the accepted therapeutic range which was not statistically significant. Extension of the dosing interval and a further increase in the dosage may result in further improvement. Based on these data, the current recommendations are inadequate for the preterm infant. Our derived dosage schedule improved but did not eliminate high trough and low peak levels of amikacin in all infants. The current recommendations should be adjusted for the preterm infant. Ongoing therapeutic drug monitoring is essential to tailor the amikacin dosage to the individual patient.
在28名体重不足2500克(平均±标准差,1.38±0.47千克;孕龄,30.50±2.86周)的早产婴儿中,研究了按照当前推荐剂量静脉注射阿米卡星的药代动力学(出生7天以内的婴儿每12小时7.5毫克/千克;出生7天以上的婴儿每8小时7.5毫克/千克)。药物经45分钟输注。在稳态时采集谷值和峰值血清样本以及另外两个样本。结果显示,半衰期(8.42±2.55小时)与孕龄之间存在统计学上显著的负相关(P = 0.002),全身清除率(每千克0.84±0.28毫升/分钟)与孕龄之间存在正相关(P = 0.02)。这些药代动力学数据用于计算早产婴儿的新给药方案。孕龄小于30周的婴儿静脉注射阿米卡星的剂量为每18小时9毫克/千克。孕龄大于30周的婴儿,剂量为每12小时9毫克/千克。使用当前推荐给药方案和根据我们的药代动力学数据得出的给药方案,比较了血清中落在治疗范围内的阿米卡星峰值和谷值水平。超出公认治疗范围的峰值和谷值水平数量有所减少,但无统计学意义。延长给药间隔并进一步增加剂量可能会带来进一步改善。基于这些数据,当前的推荐剂量对早产婴儿来说并不足够。我们得出的给药方案有所改善,但并未消除所有婴儿中阿米卡星的高谷值和低峰值水平。应为早产婴儿调整当前的推荐剂量。持续的治疗药物监测对于根据个体患者调整阿米卡星剂量至关重要。