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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 08 1996, 1860-1865, Vol 40, No. 8
AD Kashuba, CH Ballow and A Forrest
Data were gathered during an activity-controlled trial in which seriously
ill, elderly patients were randomized to receive intravenous ceftazidime or
ciprofloxacin and for which adaptive feedback control of drug
concentrations in plasma and activity profiles was prospectively performed.
The adaptive feedback control algorithm for ceftazidime used an initial
population model, a maximum a posteriori (MAP)-Bayesian pharmacokinetic
parameter value estimator, and an optimal, sparse sampling strategy for
ceftazidime that had been derived from data in the literature obtained from
volunteers. Iterative two-stage population pharmacokinetic analysis was
performed to develop an unbiased MAP- Bayesian estimator and updated
optimal, sparse sampling strategies. The final median values of the
population parameters were follows: the volume of distribution of the
central compartment was equal to 0.249 liter/kg, the volume of distribution
of the peripheral compartment was equal to 0.173 liter/kg, the
distributional clearance between the central and peripheral compartments
was equal to 0.2251 liter/h/kg, the slope of the total clearance (CL)
versus the creatinine clearance (CLCR) was equal to 0.000736 liter/h/kg of
CL/1 ml/min/1.73 m2 of CLCR, and nonrenal clearance was equal to + 0.00527
liter/h/kg. Optimal sampling times were dependent on CLCR; for CLCR of >
or = 30 ml/min/1.73 m2, the optimal sampling times were 0.583, 3.0, 7.0,
and 16.0 h and, for CLCR of < 30 ml/min/1.73 m2, optimal sampling times
were 0.583, 4.15, 11.5, and 24.0 h. The study demonstrates that because
pharmacokinetic information from volunteers may often not be reflective of
specialty populations such as critically ill elderly individuals, iterative
two-stage population pharmacokinetic analysis, MAP-Bayesian parameter
estimation, and optimal, sparse sampling strategy can be important tools in
characterizing their pharmacokinetics.
Copyright © 1996 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Development and evaluation of a Bayesian pharmacokinetic estimator and optimal, sparse sampling strategies for ceftazidime
Center for Clinical Pharmacy Research, School of Pharmacy, State University of New York at Buffalo 14260, USA.
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