Abstract

Children show a very wide range of physical development processes. These changes impact pharmacokinetic (PK) variability in pediatric patients. Most PK studies have been conducted on the Caucasian population. Therefore, whether current evidence of how developmental change affects PK and exposure-response relationships applies to Japanese pediatric patients remains unclear. This narrative review focuses on amikacin therapy in Japanese pediatric patients and shows the relationship between amikacin concentrations and efficacy/toxicity. Ten relevant articles were identified. Of these, nine articles were published in the 1980s. All studies reported a maximum concentration (Cmax) and minimum concentration (Cmin) of amikacin. Overall, articles reporting PK/pharmacodynamic (PD) indices and minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of isolated bacteria in Japanese pediatric patients is lacking, whereas all patients recovered from an infection state and showed negative cultures. Five of the included studies reported the association between Cmin and toxicity. The Cmin in three of four patients who developed toxicity was above 10 mg/L. This narrative review shows that further PK study of amikacin in Japanese pediatric patients is necessary. In particular, the pursuit of knowledge of Cmax/MIC ratio is vital. On the other hand, this review demonstrates that the optimal Cmin for Japanese pediatric patients is below 10 mg/L as a candidate concentration. However, it is noted that the number of patients who developed toxicity is very small.

Highlights

  • This review demonstrates that the optimal Cmin for Japanese pediatric patients is below 10 mg/L as a candidate concentration

  • The number of potentially relevant articles excluding Japanese pediatric patients was 1787, and the articles were published during a broad duration of time, from 1975 to 2021

  • The current problems of amikacin therapy in Japanese pediatric patients can be recognized though this review. This narrative literature review showed an overview of amikacin therapy in Japanese pediatric patients in spite of a very limited number of articles and provided challenges to be addressed and new findings

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria have been emerging concomitantly with the development of new antibiotics [1]. It is expected that resistant bacteria will directly cause 10 million deaths by 2050 [2]. Appropriate administration is one of the important determinants of successful treatment and prevents resistance to antibiotics

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