Abstract

Veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (V-A ECMO) support leads to complex pharmacokinetic alterations, whereas adequate drug dosing is paramount for efficacy and absence of toxicity in critically ill patients. Amikacin is a major antibiotic used in nosocomial sepsis, especially for these patients. We aimed to describe amikacin pharmacokinetics on V-A ECMO support and to determine relevant variables to improve its dosing. All critically ill patients requiring empirical antimicrobial therapy, including amikacin for nosocomial sepsis supported or not by V-A ECMO, were included in a prospective population pharmacokinetic study. This population pharmacokinetic analysis was built with a dedicated software, and Monte Carlo simulations were performed to identify doses achieving therapeutic plasma concentrations. Thirty-nine patients were included (control n = 15, V-A ECMO n = 24); 215 plasma assays were performed and used for the modeling process. Patients received 29 (24–33) and 32 (30–35) mg/kg of amikacin in control and ECMO groups, respectively. Data were best described by a two-compartment model with first-order elimination. Inter-individual variabilities were observed on clearance, central compartment volume (V1), and peripherical compartment volume (V2). Three significant covariates explained these variabilities: Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) stage on amikacin clearance, total body weight on V1, and ECMO support on V2. Our simulations showed that the adequate dosage of amikacin was 40 mg/kg in KDIGO stage 0 patients, while 25 mg/kg in KDIGO stage 3 patients was relevant. V-A ECMO support had only a secondary impact on amikacin pharmacokinetics, as compared to acute kidney injury.

Highlights

  • Veno-arterial ExtraCorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (V-A ECMO) support is increasingly used for critically ill patients with refractory cardiogenic shock [1]

  • While drug clearance is highly variable in critically ill patients, only one study has considered the increase of amikacin clearance in patients undergoing ECMO [14]

  • No significant difference was observed regarding the renal function according to the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) classification; acute kidney injury (AKI) was much more severe in ECMO vs

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Summary

Introduction

Veno-arterial ExtraCorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (V-A ECMO) support is increasingly used for critically ill patients with refractory cardiogenic shock [1]. These patients are highly exposed to infectious complications [2,3]. Notably antibiotics, can change in critically ill patients undergoing ECMO, which increases the apparent volume of distribution [8] and alters drugs clearance [9]. This may lead to either therapeutic failure or drug toxicity. Few studies described amikacin therapeutic drug monitoring in patients supported by ECMO: maximal concentrations were often below the recommended concentrations with the standard dosing [10,11]

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