Abstract
BackgroundSeven days of antibiotics are recommended in the setting of preterm premature rupture of membranes (PPROM) to promote latency. Azithromycin has generally replaced a seven-day course of erythromycin in current clinical practice. Azithromycin clears from plasma quickly and concentrates in local tissue which is why daily dosing is not always needed and local tissue, rather than plasma, concentrations are used to determine dosing. Based on limited pharmacokinetic studies in pregnancy, 1g one time dose of azithromycin may not maintain local (amniotic fluid) drug concentrations above minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC50) for common genitourinary pathogens (50-500ng/ml). ObjectiveWe aim to compare the pharmacokinetics of one-time vs daily dosing of azithromycin in the setting of preterm pre-labor rupture of membranes (PPROM) Study DesignThis is a randomized clinical trial of singletons with PPROM randomized to 1gram oral azithromycin once or 500mg oral azithromycin daily x7 days. Primary outcome was amniotic fluid azithromycin concentrations over 8 days. Secondary outcomes included plasma azithromycin trough concentrations. Plasma was collected at time points 1-4hrs and 12-24hrs after first dose, and then every 24hrs through 8 days. Amniotic fluid was collected opportunistically throughout the day noninvasively with Always Flex-foam pads. We aimed to enroll 20 participants to achieve N=5 still pregnant through 8 days in each group. Continuous variables compared with Mann Whitney U test and relationship between azithromycin concentration and time assessed with linear regression. ResultsThe study was halted after N=6 enrolled due to lagging enrollment, with 3 in each group. The mean gestational age of enrollment was 27.1±1.7weeks in the 1g group and 31.0±1.4 weeks in the 500mg daily group. One participant in each group had latency to delivery >7days. Regarding amniotic fluid azithromycin concentration, there was a difference in change in amniotic fluid azithromycin concentration over time between groups (p<0.001). Amniotic fluid concentration of azithromycin was relatively stable in the 1g once group (B=-0.07 (-0.44 – 0.31), p=0.71), in contrast, amniotic fluid concentration (ng/ml) increased over time (hours) in the 500mg daily group (B=1.3 (0.7 – 1.9), p<0.001). By ≥96hours median amniotic fluid levels of azithromycin were lower in the 1g once dosing group (median 11[7-56]) compared to 500mg daily (median 46 [23-196]), with a median difference -27 (-154 to -1), p=0.03. In plasma, there was higher azithromycin concentration during the first 24hrs with 1g once vs 500mg daily (median difference 637ng/ml (101-1547), p=0.01), however by ≥96hrs plasma azithromycin declined and was virtually undetectable in the 1g once group, while trough plasma levels in the 500mg remained elevated (median difference -207ng/ml (-271 to -155), p=0.03). Conclusion500mg daily dosing of azithromycin maintains higher amniotic fluid concentrations, and more consistently greater than common MICs, over eight days compared to 1g once in the setting of PPROM.
Published Version
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