Abstract

Vancomycin is frequently administered to critically ill patients by continuous infusion in order to optimise drug efficacy; however, there are few data available on the efficacy of this strategy in septic patients. In this retrospective analysis, 261 patients treated with continuous infusion of vancomycin in the Department of Intensive Care at Hôpital Erasme (Brussels, Belgium) were evaluated. Creatinine clearance (CLCr) was calculated from 24-h urine collection and normalised to body surface area. During the study period, 139 patients (53%) had insufficient vancomycin concentrations (<20μg/mL) on Day 1 and 87 patients (33%) on Day 2. Patients who had insufficient drug concentrations on Day 1 of therapy were more likely to be men, to have a higher CLCr and to have received lower loading and daily vancomycin doses than other patients, who received greater vasopressor support and had higher Sepsis-related Organ Failure Assessment scores. In multivariate regression analysis, high CLCr and male sex independently predicted the presence of insufficient vancomycin concentrations on Days 1 and 2 of therapy. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis for CLCr showed an area under the concentration–time curve of 0.75 (95% confidence interval 0.69–0.81) to predict insufficient drug concentrations on Day 1 of therapy. A CLCr>120mL/min/1.73m2 had a sensitivity of 26%, a specificity of 94% and an 84% positive predictive value of 84% for vancomycin concentrations <20μg/mL. In conclusion, approximately one-half of the septic Intensive Care Unit patients treated with continuous infusion of vancomycin at currently recommended doses had insufficient drug concentrations in the early phase of therapy. A high CLCr was the variable most strongly associated with insufficient drug concentrations.

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