Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT01786161

Prospective Evaluation of a Vancomycin Nomogram With a Continuous Infusion of Vancomycin for Surgical ICU Patients

Status
Terminated
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
44 (actual)
Sponsor
Massachusetts General Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Vancomycin is an essential antimicrobial which is frequently used in the ICU for suspected methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection. Therefore, it is vital to optimize the dosing of vancomycin for this critically ill population. The most efficacious method of administering vancomycin is debated in the literature. Since vancomycin is associated with slow bactericidal activity, it is important to closely monitor serum concentrations so as to achieve early target serum concentration, particularly when treating aggressive S. aureus infections. One study has shown that vancomycin infused continuously may enable faster and more consistent achievement of a therapeutic serum concentration when compared to intermittent infusion. A faster achievement in the goal serum vancomycin concentration would be a protective factor for intensive care unit mortality in patients with MRSA infection. Currently in the surgical ICU (SICU) of our institute, vancomycin is administered based on a vancomycin dosing nomogram. Less than fifty percent of the ICU patients following this nomogram achieved target vancomycin concentration of 15 after 24 hours. To better achieve target vancomycin concentration in 24 hours, we developed a new vancomycin dosing nomogram with a continuous infusion. The aim is to determine which of the two dosing nomogram is more efficient and safer for SICU patients.

Detailed description

Early administration of effective antibiotics is the cornerstone of management in septic patients; however, altered pharmacokinetics in critically ill patients has lead to subtherapeutic antibiotic exposure with standard antibiotic dosing and administration. This is further evidenced by low therapeutic target achievement with our intermittent vancomycin dosing nomogram. Administering vancomycin by continuous infusions may lead to achieving a therapeutic concentration and AUC24 more quickly than the administration by intermittent infusions as well as provide a more consistent concentration throughout the dosing period. Therefore, a new vancomycin continuous infusion nomogram was developed to increase the achievement of a goal vancomycin concentration within 24 hours. We hypothesized that vancomycin administered as continuous infusion would achieve the therapeutic target sooner and more consistently than when administered as an intermittent infusion in critically ill surgical patients. The aims of this study were to determine the dosing differences between continuous (CIV) and intermittent (IIV) dosing in critically ill surgical intensive care unit (SICU) patients with preserved renal function and whether calculated Cockcroft-Gault Creatinine Clearance (CG CrCL) or measured creatinine clearance (CrCL) is a better predictor of vancomycin clearance.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGVancomycin continuous infusionVancomycin 24 hour intravenous continuous infusion
DRUGVancomycin intermittent dosing intervalVancomycin intravenous infusion at rate 1000mg/hr

Timeline

Start date
2013-09-01
Primary completion
2016-06-01
Completion
2016-06-01
First posted
2013-02-07
Last updated
2017-06-07
Results posted
2017-05-05

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01786161. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.