Antimicrobial PK and Dosing in PIRRT: Systematic Review
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Introduction: Prolonged intermittent renal replacement therapy (PIRRT) is gaining popularity as a renal replacement modality in intensive care units but there is a relative lack of guidance regarding antimicrobial clearance and dosing when compared to other modalities.
Objectives: The objectives of this systematic review were to 1) identify and describe the pharmacokinetics (PK) of relevant antimicrobials used in critically ill adults receiving PIRRT, 2) evaluate the quality of evidence supporting this data and 3) propose dosing recommendations based on the synthesis of this data.
Methods: A search strategy for multiple databases was designed and executed to identify relevant published evidence describing the PK of antimicrobials used in critically ill adults receiving PIRRT. Quality assessment, evaluation of reporting and relevant data extraction was conducted in duplicate. Synthesis of PK/pharmacodynamic (PD) outcomes, dosing recommendations from study authors and physicochemical properties of included antibiotics were assessed by investigators in addition to the quality of evidence to develop dosing recommendations.
Results: Thirty-nine studies enrolling 452 patients met criteria for inclusion and provided PK and/or PD data for 20 antimicrobials in critically ill adults receiving PIRRT. Nineteen studies describe both PK and PD outcomes. Vancomycin (12 studies, 171 patients), meropenem (7 studies, 84 patients) and piperacillin/tazobactam (5 studies, 56 patients) were the most frequent antimicrobials encountered. The quality of evidence was deemed strong for 7/20 antimicrobials and strong dosing recommendations were determined for 9/20 antimicrobials.
Conclusions: This systematic review updates and addressed issues of quality in previous systematic reviews on this topic. Despite an overall low quality of evidence, strong recommendations were able to be made for almost half of the identified antimicrobials. Knowledge gaps persist for many antimicrobials and higher quality studies (i.e., population PK studies with assessment of PD target attainment) are needed to address these gaps.
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