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Use of antibacterial agents in renal failure R2 박준민.

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Presentation on theme: "Use of antibacterial agents in renal failure R2 박준민."— Presentation transcript:

1 Use of antibacterial agents in renal failure R2 박준민

2 Introduction The kidney is the major organ for maintaining fluid and electrolyte homeostasis. Changes in renal function → effects on the pharmacology of antibacterial agents Reviews the pharmacokinetics of antibacterial agents in patients with normal and decreased renal function.

3 Pharmacokinetics Bioavailability - Degree that a drug is absorbed into the systemic circulation after extravascular administration - Decreased in renal insufficency : nausea, vomiting, diabetic gastroparesis, and intestinal edema, conversion of urea to ammonia by gastric urease, antacids, or the use of alkalating agents, such as bicarbonate and citrate, decreased small bowel movement

4 Pharmacokinetics Metabolism - First-pass hepatic metabolism may be diminished in uremia leading to increased serum levels of oral antibacterial agents - Impaired plasma protein binding increases the level of free drug - Increases the amount of drug available for elimination By dialysis or hepatic metabolism

5 Pharmacokinetics Distribution - Volume of distribution(Vd) : amount of drug in the body/plasma concentration : protein-binding drug → small Vd : lipid soluble drug → large Vd

6 Pharmacokinetics Elimination - The rate of elimination of most antibacterial agents follows first-order kinetics - Proportional to the amount of drug in the body - Rate of elimination= K x amount of drug in the body = K x Vd x plasma conc. - Plasma drug clearance= K x Vd - T 1/2 = ln2/K= 0.693/K = (0.693)(Vd)/plasma drug clearance ∴ Vd ∝ 1/plasma drug clearance

7 Pharmacokinetics Creatinine clearance - The rate of elimination of drugs by the kidney depends on the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) - A 24-hour urine collection allows accurate determination of the endogenous creatinine clearance, which is a close approximation to the GFR - Serum creatinine alone is not a reliable measure of creatinine clearance(ex. Elderly, debilitated pt.)

8 Pharmacokinetics Estimation of creatinine clearance - The equation of Cockroft and Gault - Creatinine clearance in males = {(140-age) total body weight in kg}/(72 x serum creatinine) - In females the clearance is 85% of this value - The equation of Pesola et al - Use ideal body wt. instead of total body wt. - Ideal body wt.= 50kg + 2.3kg /inch(over 5 ft) [male] = 45.5kg + 2.3kg/inch(over 5ft) [female]

9 Dosing of antibacterial agents in renal failure Initial dose - Based on extracellular fluid volume - Not altered in the presence of decreased renal function - Ascites, edema: large dose - Dehydration: small dose - 4 maintenance doses are required to achieve a steady dose

10 Dosing of antibacterial agents in renal failure Maintenance dose - After the loading dose, subsequent maintenance doses frequently require modification in patients with decreased renal function. - Dose reduction or interval extension

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23 Dosing of antibacterial agents in renal failure Once-daily aminoglycoside - Aminoglycoside : Treatment of certain gram-negative bacteria : High side effect profile and prolonged postantibiotic effect - Once daily aminoglycoside therapy → reduce nephrotoxicity and ototoxicity → reduce costs and prolonged postantibiotic effect (Hatala et al: meta - analysis)

24 Dosing of antibacterial agents in renal failure -Once daily aminoglycoside therapy : PID, gram-negative bacteremia, UTI, febrile neutropenia, gynecologic infections, respiratory infections (effective) : pregnancy, Cl cr < 20mL/min, bone and joint infections, central nervous system infections, infective endocarditis, obesity, burns, solid organ transplantation (non effective) : initial dose is based on Cl cr

25 Intermittent dosing cefazolin with hemodialysis - Hemodialysis patients with suspected bloodstream or vascular infections, vancomycin and gentamicin are frequently given as empiric therapy. - Limitation of vancomycin use : emergence of vancomycin-resistant enterococcus and concerns for increasing resistance of S aureus to glycopeptides Dosing of antibacterial agents in renal failure

26 Intermittent dosing cefazolin with hemodialysis - Cefazolin can be administered on either a weight- based or fixed-dose schedule after each dialysis session and can provide a safe and effective alternative to vancomycin for susceptible organisms (Kuypers et al, Sowinski et al, Fogel et al)

27 Dosing of antibacterial agents in renal failure Serum levels - Useful d/t potential toxicity - Esp. vancomycin, aminoglycoside - Vancomycin : Conc.-independent killing effect : Serum level does not consistently correlated with toxicity : Debate on serum level use

28 Dosing of antibacterial agents in renal failure - Aminoglycoside : Conc.-dependent killing effect : Level must be followed d/t nephrotoxicity - Peak level, trough level, random level

29 Dosing of antibacterial agents in renal failure Dialysis - Start when renal failure progress to the point of uremia or inadequate urine output - Cl cr < 15mL/min for diabetic pt. < 10mL/min for nondiabetic pt.

30 Adverse effect of antibacterial agents in renal failure Inappropriate dose and pathologic changes associated with uremia Neurotoxicity - Psychosis, hallucination, myoclonus, seizure - Penicillin, imipenem, b-lactam, acyclovir, amantadine, quinolone Ototoxicity - Erythromycin

31 Adverse effect of antibacterial agents in renal failure Hypoglycemia - Sulfonamide : structural similarity of hypoglycemic agent Platelet aggregation abnormality - High doses of penicillin Vit K deficiency - Penicillin, cephalosporin

32 Adverse effect of antibacterial agents in renal failure Spontaneous achilles tendon rupture - Fluoroquinolones Hepatotoxicity - Tetracycline

33 Reference


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