Pharmacokinetic and Pharmacodynamic Profiling of Minocycline for Injection following a Single Infusion in Critically Ill Adults in a Phase IV Open-Label Multicenter Study (ACUMIN)
Intravenous (i.v.) minocycline is increasingly used to treat infections caused by multidrug-resistant (MDR) Despite its being approved nearly 50 years ago, published information on its pharmacokinetic (PK) profile is limited. This multicenter study examined the PK and probability of pharmacokinetic-...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 2021-02, Vol.65 (3) |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Intravenous (i.v.) minocycline is increasingly used to treat infections caused by multidrug-resistant (MDR)
Despite its being approved nearly 50 years ago, published information on its pharmacokinetic (PK) profile is limited. This multicenter study examined the PK and probability of pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) target attainment profile of i.v. minocycline in critically ill patients, with suspected or documented infection with Gram-negative bacteria. The PK study population included 55 patients who received a single 200-mg i.v. dose of minocycline. Plasma PK samples were collected predose and 1, 4, 12, 24, 36, and 48 h after initiation of minocycline. Total and unbound minocycline concentrations were determined at each time point. Probabilities of achieving the PK-PD targets associated with stasis and 1-log killing (free area under the curve above the MIC [
AUC:MIC] of 12 and 18, respectively) in an immunocompetent animal pneumonia infection model of
were evaluated. A two-compartment population PK model with zero-order i.v. input and first-order elimination, which estimated a constant fraction unbound (f
) for minocycline, best characterized the total and unbound plasma minocycline concentration-time data. The only two covariates retained in the final PK model were body surface area (associated with central volume of distribution) and albumin (associated with f
). In the PK-PD probability of target attainment analyses, minocycline 200 mg i.v. every 12 h (Q12H) was predicted to result in a suboptimal PK-PD profile for patients with
infections with MIC values of >1 mg/liter. Like all PK-PD profiling studies of this nature, these findings need clinical confirmation. |
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ISSN: | 0066-4804 1098-6596 |
DOI: | 10.1128/AAC.01809-20 |