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Continuous Infusion of High Doses of Cefepime in Intensive Care Unit: Assessment of Steady-State Plasma Level and Incidence on Neurotoxicity

Vanessa Jean-Michel, Corentin Homey, Patrick Devos, Pierre-Yves Delannoy, Nicolas Boussekey, Thomas Caulier, O. Leroy, Hugues Georges

2022Antibiotics11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Continuous infusion (CI) with high doses of cefepime is recommended in the empirical antimicrobial regimen of critically ill patients with suspected Gram-negative sepsis. This study aimed to determine factors associated with cefepime overdosing and the incidence of cefepime-induced neurotoxicity (CIN) in these patients. We performed a retrospective study including all patients receiving cefepime treatment between January 2019 and May 2022. The plasma level of cefepime defining overdosing was over 35 mg/L. Neurotoxicity was defined according to strict criteria and correlated with concomitant steady-state concentration of cefepime. Seventy-eight courses of cefepime treatment were analyzed. The mean cefepime plasma level at steady state was 59.8 ± 29.3 mg/L, and overdosing occurred in 80% of patients. Renal failure and a daily dose > 5 g were independently associated with overdosing. CIN was present in 30% of patients. In multivariate analysis, factors associated with CIN were chronic renal failure and a cefepime plasma concentration ≥ 60 mg/L. CIN was not associated with mortality. Overdosing is frequent in patients receiving high doses of cefepime by CI. Steady-state levels are higher than targeted therapeutic pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic objectives. The risk of CIN is important when the plasma concentration is ≥60 mg/L.

Topics & Concepts

CefepimeMedicineNeurotoxicityIntensive care unitIncidence (geometry)Plasma levelsPlasma concentrationIntensive care medicineEmergency medicineAnesthesiaPharmacologyInternal medicineToxicityChemistryAntibioticsMathematicsAntibiotic resistanceGeometryBiochemistryImipenemAntibiotics Pharmacokinetics and EfficacyPoisoning and overdose treatmentsEpilepsy research and treatment