Critically ill patients frequently have substantially altered pharmacokinetics compared to non-critically ill patients. We investigated the impact of pharmacokinetic alterations on bacterial killing and resistance for commonly used meropenem dosing regimens. A Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolate (MICmeropenem 0.25 mg/ liter) was studied in the hollow-fiber infection model (inoculum ∼107.5 CFU/ml; 10 days). Pharmacokinetic profiles representing critically ill patients with augmented renal clearance (ARC), normal, or impaired renal function (creatinine clearances of 285, 120, or ∼10 ml/min, respectively) were generated for three meropenem regimens (2, 1, and 0.5 g administered as 8-hourly 30-min infusions), plus 1 g given 12 hourly with impaired renal function. The time course of total and less-susceptible populations and MICs were determined. Mechanism-based modeling (MBM) was performed using S-ADAPT. All dosing regimens across all renal functions produced similar initial bacterial killing (≤∼2.5 log10). For all regimens subjected to ARC, regrowth occurred after 7 h. For normal and impaired renal function, bacterial killing continued until 23 to 47 h; regrowth then occurred with 0.5-and 1-g regimens with normal renal function (fT<5×MIC = 56 and 69%, fCmin/MIC ≥ 2); the emergence of less-susceptible populations (≥32-fold increases in MIC) accompanied all regrowth. Bacterial counts remained suppressed across 10 days with normal (2-g 8-hourly regimen) and impaired (all regimens) renal function (fT
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Bergen, P. J., Bulitta, J. B., Kirkpatrick, C. M. J., Rogers, K. E., McGregor, M. J., Wallis, S. C., … Landersdorfer, C. B. (2017). Substantial impact of altered pharmacokinetics in critically Ill patients on the antibacterial effects of meropenem evaluated via the dynamic hollow-fiber infection model. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 61(5). https://doi.org/10.1128/AAC.02642-16
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