1. THERAPEUTIC DRUG MONITORING: VANCOMYCIN DOSING AND PRACTICES IN PEDIATRIC POPULATION IN ERBIL.
- Author
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Mohammed, Suwar Hassan, Dizaye, Kawa Fareq, and Azeez, Suha Saeed
- Subjects
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DRUG monitoring , *CHILD patients , *AGE groups , *PEDIATRIC therapy , *COMPLEX variables - Abstract
Background: Vancomycin is an essential antimicrobial used in pediatric healthcare, but achieving therapeutic serum concentrations is complex due to variable pharmacokinetics in different pediatric age groups. This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of empirical vancomycin dosing in achieving target trough concentrations in pediatric patients. Materials & Methods: This prospective, observational study at Raparin Teaching Hospital for Children conducted over four months from June 2023 to October 2023, in Iraq. In this study, 75 pediatric patients who needed vancomycin treatment were included in the study, and 60 pediatric patients remained in the study after the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Sampling method was hospital record, patients receiving vancomycin. Included pediatric patients aged one day to 18 years receiving intravenous vancomycin. Intravenous vancomycin (Pfizer, United States) was administered as an infusion over 30 minutes. The dosage was determined by the treating physician based on age and renal function. Blood samples were collected at specified intervals after vancomycin infusion, including peak (end of infusion) and trough (just before the next scheduled dose) levels. Results: Of the 60 pediatric patients who received vancomycin therapy for less than 5 days, 23 (38.3%) achieved target trough concentrations with the initial dose. Among them, neonates (21.1%), infants (27.3%), children (50%), and adolescents (60%) demonstrated varied success rates of target trough level attainment. The study also found 67.7% of vancomycin courses resulted in subtherapeutic levels (<10 mg/L). Nephrotoxicity occurred in 10% of treatment courses. The median time to achieve therapeutic levels was 3 days, often requiring dose adjustments. Conclusion: Achieving target vancomycin trough concentrations in pediatric patients is challenging, with a significant trend towards subtherapeutic levels. This suggests the necessity for age-specific dosing regimens and close therapeutic monitoring to optimize vancomycin therapy in pediatric settings, especially in neonates and infants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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