K. Nomura, N. Morikawa, K. Ikawa
Apr 1, 2008
Citations
0
Influential Citations
11
Citations
Quality indicators
Journal
The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy
Abstract
OBJECTIVES To establish a cefozopran (a fourth-generation cephem) population pharmacokinetic model using patient data and use it to explore alternative dosage regimens that could optimize the currently used dosing regimen to achieve higher likelihood of pharmacodynamic exposure against pathogenic bacteria. METHODS We conducted a prospective clinical trial of cefozopran for haematological patients with febrile neutropenia (FN). Twenty-two patients (30 episodes) were selected to receive intravenous cefozopran every 8 h on a daily basis. We gathered concentration data and performed the NONMEM program. The Monte Carlo simulation was performed to assess the pharmacodynamic exposure based on the population pharmacokinetics and MIC. RESULTS The NONMEM program demonstrated that a two-compartment model provided a best fit for the data, that is, CL of 4.62 (L/h), V1 of 10.3 (L), Q of 4.47 (L/h), and V2 of 4.48 (L). On the basis of the Japanese national surveillance findings for Pseudomonas aeruginosa, methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus, coagulase-negative Staphylococcus, viridans group streptococci, Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae, Monte Carlo simulation data showed that probability of target attainment(T>MIC = 70%) is 67% to 97% for dosing every 8 h, and 48% to 88% for dosing every 12 h. For the patients in whom the efficacy of cefozopran could be evaluated, 17 of 22 patients (77.2%) survived the episode of FN without requiring further antibacterial treatment. CONCLUSIONS Our study proved that Monte Carlo simulation based on population pharmacokinetics can determine optimized dosage and method. The optimal regimen for this cephem was found to be three times daily.