Volume 35, Issue 5 , Pages 500-503, May 2010
Daily serum piperacillin monitoring is advisable in critically ill patients
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to evaluate the benefit of monitoring serum piperacillin concentrations in critically ill patients. This was an 11-month, prospective, observational study in a 30-bed Intensive Care Unit in a teaching hospital, involving 24 critically ill patients with evidence of bacterial sepsis. All patients received a 66
mg/kg intravenous bolus of piperacillin in combination with tazobactam (ratio 1:0.125) followed by continuous infusion of 200
mg/kg/24
h. The dosage was adjusted when the serum piperacillin concentration either fell below 4× the drug's minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) for the causative agent or exceeded the toxic threshold of 150
mg/L. With the initial regimen, serum piperacillin concentrations were within the therapeutic target range in only 50.0% of patients (n
=
12). This proportion increased to 75.0% (18 patients) (P
=
0.006) following dosage adjustment. For patients with low initial serum piperacillin concentrations (n
=
8), the percentage of time during which the concentration remained above 4× MIC (%T
>
4× MIC) was 7.1
±
5.9% before dosage adjustment and 27.3
±
8.6% afterwards. In conclusion, in critically ill patients, monitoring and adjustment of serum piperacillin levels is required to prevent overdosing and might also help to correct underdosing, an important cause of antibiotic therapy failure.
Keywords: Intensive Care Unit, Appropriate antibiotic administration, Daily serum concentration monitoring, Piperacillin
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PII: S0924-8579(10)00063-4
doi:10.1016/j.ijantimicag.2010.01.018
© 2010 Elsevier B.V. and the International Society of Chemotherapy. All rights reserved.
Volume 35, Issue 5 , Pages 500-503, May 2010
