Objective: This study measured the effect of renal function on the plasma concentrations of ceftazidime and avibactam in critically ill patients. We also sought to measure the concentration ratio of ceftazidime to avibactam.
Methods: This was a cohort study at a tertiary referral centre in Italy, on patients treated with continuous infusion of ceftazidime-avibactam (CAZ-AVI) between November 2019 and December 2023. The association between creatine clearance (CrCl) and free plasma ceftazidime and avibactam concentration, as well as CAZ-AVI ratio was explored to assess correlation and potential risk to fail to achieve target therapeutic concentration.
Results: Fifty-two patients, predominantly male (75%), with a median age of 68.5 y were included. Our analyses provided strong evidence for inverse correlation between CrCl and both free-CAZ (r = -0.627; R2 = 0.3936; P < 0.001) and free-AVI plasma concentration (r = -0.619; R2 = 0.3832; P < 0.001). Overall CrCl alone could explain about 40% of overall variation of either free-CAZ and free-AVI. Linear models suggest that free-CAZ and free-AVI concentration drop of about 7.31% and 9.23% for each 10 point increase of CrCl, respectively. Assessment of the CAZ-AVI ratio supports a direct linear association with CrCl suggesting that free-AVI concentration is more affected by CrCl variation than free-CAZ concentration. Patients with CrCl ≥130 mL/min showed a significantly higher risk of suboptimal drug exposure (i.e., less than 4 times the MIC) both to CAZ and AVI.
Conclusion: The findings emphasise the need for individualised dosing strategies of CAZ-AVI based on renal function, for antibiotics used in critically ill patients. The study suggests that underdosing in patients with high CrCl is likely to be common and as such could affect drug effectiveness.
Keywords: Adult; Anti-bacterial agents; Avibactam; Azabicyclo compounds; Beta-lactamase inhibitors; Ceftazidime; Drug combinations; Drug monitoring; Humans; Kidney diseases.
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