Introduction: Sepsis is a frequent and life-threatening clinical entity and antibiotic treatment is one of the most important interventions, together with source control and hemodynamic resuscitation. Guidelines have highlighted the importance of an early (i.e. within 1-3 h from recognition) and appropriate (i.e. the pathogen is sensitive in vitro to the administered drug) antimicrobial therapy in this setting.Areas covered: Antibiotic therapy should be individualized according to several issues, including early pathogen identification, optimal drug regimens based on pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamics (PK/PD) and adequate duration using both clinical and biological biomarkers. This narrative review has considered the most relevant studies evaluating these issues.Expert opinion: Rapid identification pathogen resistance profile (i.e. the minimal inhibitory concentration for the available antimicrobials), real-time measurement of drug concentrations with regimen adjustment on MIC and daily measurement of procalcitonin to guide duration of therapy are the main issues to individualize the antibiotic management in critically ill patients.
Keywords: Antibiotic; critically ill; individualized therapy; pharmacodynamics; pharmacokinetic; procalcitonin; sepsis.