Abstract
Critical illness creates challenges for healthcare providers in determining the optimal treatment of severe disease, particularly in determining the most appropriate selection and dosing of medications. Critically ill patients experience endogenous physiologic changes that alter the pharmacokinetics (PKs) of medications. These alterations can be further compounded by mechanical support modalities such as extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Specific components of the ECMO circuit have the potential to affect drug PKs through drug sequestration and an increase in the volume of distribution. Factors related to the medications themselves also play a role. These PK alterations create problems when trying to properly utilize antimicrobials in this patient population. The literature seeking to identify appropriate antimicrobial dosing regimens is both limited and difficult to evaluate due to patient variability and an inability to determine the exact role of the ECMO circuit in reduced drug concentrations. Lipophilic and highly protein bound medications are considered more likely to undergo significant drug sequestration in an ECMO circuit, and this general trend represents a logical starting point in antimicrobial selection and dosing in patients on ECMO support. This should not be the only consideration, however, as identifying infection and evaluating the efficacy of treatments in this population is challenging. Due to these challenges, therapeutic drug monitoring should be utilized whenever possible, particularly in cases with severe infection or high concern for drug toxicity.
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