Abstract

One of the first-line drugs for empirical antibiotic therapy in patients with hospital-acquired infections is meropenem. An often neglected problem in sepsis is that patients with a normal serum creatinine concentration (SCr) might display augmented renal clearance (ARC). Here we describe two cases of sepsis with subtherapeutic exposures with standard meropenem dosing in whom therapy could be optimised by therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM). A 37-year-old man with acute lymphatic leukaemia and sepsis had a normal SCr at the beginning of his Intensive Care Unit (ICU) stay but showed decreased SCr of between 30μmol/L and 40μmol/L during his stay. He failed to achieve effective plasma concentrations with the meropenem standard dose of 3g/day. Estimated glomerular filtration rate revealed values between 120mL/min and 160mL/min. He required a high meropenem daily dosage of 12g that was far above the approved maximum dose. A 66-year-old patient undergoing surgery of a pulmonary aspergilloma presented SCr persistently <50μmol/L, indicating ARC between 120mL/min and 150mL/min. This patient required 8g of meropenem to achieve effective plasma concentrations. TDM may represent an invaluable approach to optimising drug exposure of β-lactam antibiotics in patients with ARC in the ICU. Further trials are clearly needed to become better informed about empirical dosing regimens usable in the ICU setting with regard to the relevance of ARC. In the meantime, daily measurement of creatinine clearance as well as TDM can be used to identify patients who manifest ARC, thereby allowing drug therapy to achieve the therapeutic range.

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