Abscess penetration of cefpirome: concentrations and simulated pharmacokinetic profiles in pus
Autor: | Rudolf Karch, Thomas Feurstein, Michaela Böhmdorfer, Markus Zeitlinger, Maria C. Kjellsson, Andreas Püspök, Robert Sauermann, Thomas Wild, Walter Jäger, Herbert Langenberger, Stefan Winkler |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2011 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.drug_class Antibiotics Pharmacology toxicology Models Biological Pharmacokinetics Antibiotic therapy medicine Humans Pharmacology (medical) Abscess Infusions Intravenous Pharmacology Suppuration business.industry General Medicine Cefpirome Penetration (firestop) Middle Aged bacterial infections and mycoses medicine.disease Anti-Bacterial Agents Body Fluids Cephalosporins Anesthesia Area Under Curve Body region Female business medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | European journal of clinical pharmacology. 68(10) |
ISSN: | 1432-1041 |
Popis: | Abscess patients frequently receive antibiotic therapy when incision cannot be performed or in addition to incision. However, antibiotic concentrations in human abscesses are widely unknown. Pharmacokinetics of cefpirome in 12 human abscesses located in different body regions was studied. Cefpirome (2 g) was administered as an intravenous short infusion, and concentrations were measured in plasma over an 8-h period and in abscesses at incision. A pharmacokinetic two-stage model was applied. At abscess incision performed 158 ± 112 min after the start of the infusion, the cefpirome concentrations in the abscess fluid varied markedly, ranging from ≤0.1 (limit of quantification) to 47 (mean 8.4 ± 14.1 ) mg/L. Cefpirome was detectable in nine of 12 abscesses. Maximum concentrations were calculated to be 183 ± 106 mg/L in plasma and 12 ± 16 mg/L in the abscess. A cefpirome concentration of 2 mg/L, which is the minimum concentration inhibiting growth of 90% of the most relevant bacterial pathogens, was exceeded spontaneously in six of 12 abscesses after a single dose. Cefpirome concentrations in the abscess did not correlate with either the pH or the ratio of surface area to volume of the abscesses, nor with plasma pharmacokinetics. Cefpirome may be useful to treat abscess patients because it was detectable in most abscesses after a single dose. However, the penetration of cefpirome into abscesses is extremely variable and cannot be predicted by measuring other available covariates. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |