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Trials / Not Yet Recruiting

Not Yet RecruitingNCT07085624

Early Optimization of Ceftazidime Regimen in Critical Care

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
128 (estimated)
Sponsor
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Saint Etienne · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Hospital-acquired infections, most of which are caused by Gram-negative bacteria, are common in intensive care units and have a major impact on patient prognosis. Patient survival in severe sepsis and septic shock depends on the early administration of appropriate antibiotic therapy, with mortality increasing by 7.6% for each hour of delay, justifying the probabilistic use of broad-spectrum antibiotics such as ceftazidime, an essential betalactamine, particularly used for its activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a frequent pathogen in nosocomial infections. It is currently recommended that ceftazidime should initially be administered as a 2g loading dose, followed by maintenance treatment by continuous infusion, at a dose adapted to renal function. The recommended dosage regimen, with its 2g loading dose, was developed using the median value of parameters from a pharmacokinetic model. This explains the findings of many critical care studies, which have found that 40-60% of patients initially have concentrations below target with the recommended dosing regimen. In the context of critical care, maintaining concentrations within the target therapeutic range is difficult due to variations in the elimination clearance of ceftazidime. Ceftazidime is mainly eliminated by the kidneys. Critical patients may have increased glomerular filtration rate, or, conversely, impaired renal function, with rapid variations in the event of severe infection. This leads to high intra- and inter-individual variability, and increases the risk of antibiotic under- or overdose when the maintenance dose is administered at a fixed dose (6g/d continuously). This high variability can also be observed in the volume of distribution (capillary leakage, oedema, perfusion volumes, effusions ...). In order to propose an individualised dosing regimen, we therefore propose an iterative randomised study to : * Step 1: FORTOPTIM\_1 Evaluation of an optimised dosage regimen based on literature data compared with the standard psological regimen. * Step 2: FORTOPTIM\_2 Build a pharmacokinetic model from the prospective data obtained in step 1. Based on this model, an individualised dosage regimen (loading dose and maintenance dose) will be obtained for step 3. * Step 3: FORTOPTIM\_3 Prospectively evaluate in a randomised trial the individualised dosing regimen previously defined (Step 2) by comparing it to the best dosing regimen determined in Step 1 or to the standard dosing regimen if there is no significant difference in Step 1.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGceftazidimeceftazidime loading dose and maintenance dose
BIOLOGICALplasma ceftazidime dosageplasma ceftazidime dosage kinetics will be performed according to an optimal D- sampling plan (4 measurements per subject: T0+5min, T0+3h, T0+6h, T0+24h, PFIM software). T0 corresponds to the time to administer the ceftazidime loading dose.

Timeline

Start date
2026-01-01
Primary completion
2026-11-01
Completion
2026-11-01
First posted
2025-07-25
Last updated
2025-11-24

Locations

8 sites across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07085624. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.