Aminoglycosides and dosing frequency-related toxicity:-
Traditionally, aminoglycosides have been administered in two or three equally divided daily doses for patients with normal renal function. However, once-daily aminoglycoside dosing may be preferred in certain clinical situations.
Traditionally, aminoglycosides have been administered in two or three equally divided daily doses for patients with normal renal function. However, once-daily aminoglycoside dosing may be preferred in certain clinical situations.
Aminoglycosides have concentration-dependent killing; that is, increasing concentrations kill an increasing proportion of bacteria and at a more rapid rate. They also have a significant postantibiotic effect, such that the antibacterial activity persists beyond the time during which measurable drug is present. The postantibiotic effect of aminoglycosides can reach several hours. Because of these properties, a given total amount of aminoglycoside may have better efficacy when administered as a single large dose than when administered as multiple smaller doses.
Aminoglycoside toxicity is both time- and concentration-dependent. Toxicity is unlikely to occur until a certain threshold concentration is achieved, but once that concentration is achieved the time above this threshold becomes critical. This threshold is not precisely defined, but a trough concentration above 2 mcg/mL is predictive of toxicity. At clinically relevant doses, the time above this threshold will be greater with multiple smaller doses of drug than with a single large dose.
Numerous clinical studies demonstrate that a single daily dose of aminoglycoside is just as effective and no more (and often less) toxic than multiple smaller doses. Therefore, many authorities now recommend that aminoglycosides be administered as a single daily dose in many clinical situations. The efficacy of once-daily aminoglycoside dosing in combination therapy of enterococcal, streptococcal, and staphylococcal endocarditis remains to be defined, and the standard low-dose, thrice-daily administration is still recommended. The role of once-daily dosing in pregnancy and in neonates also is not well-defined.
Once-daily dosing has potential practical advantages. For example, determination of serum concentrations is probably unnecessary unless aminoglycoside is given for more than 3 days. A drug administered once a day rather than three times a day saves time. And once-a-day dosing lends itself to outpatient therapy.
C
