Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

medicine

Population pharmacokinetic model and limited sampling strategies for personalized dosing of levofloxacin in tuberculosis patients

Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, Volume 62, No. 12, Article e01092-18, Year 2018

Levofloxacin is an antituberculosis drug with substantial interindividual pharmacokinetic variability; therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) could therefore be helpful to improve treatment results. TDM would be more feasible with limited sampling strategies (LSSs), a method to estimate the area under the concentration curve for the 24-h dosing interval (AUC0 –24) by using a limited number of samples. This study aimed to develop a population pharmacokinetic (popPK) model of levofloxacin in tuberculosis patients, along with LSSs using a Bayesian and multiple linear regression approach. The popPK model and Bayesian LSS were developed using data from 30 patients and externally validated with 20 patients. The LSS based on multiple linear regression was internally validated using jackknife analysis. Only clinically suitable LSSs (maximum time span, 8 h; minimum interval, 1 h; 1 to 3 samples) were tested. Performance criteria were root-mean-square error (RMSE) of 15%, mean prediction error (MPE) of 5%, and r2 value of 0.95. A one-compartment model with lag time best described the data while only slightly underestimating the AUC0 –24 (mean, 7.9%; standard error [SE], 1.7%). The Bayesian LSS using 0- and 5-h postdose samples (RMSE, 8.8%; MPE, 0.42%; r2 0.957) adequately estimated the AUC0 –24, with a mean underestimation of 4.4% (SE, 2.7%). The multiple linear regression LSS using 0- and 4-h postdose samples (RMSE, 7.0%; MPE, 5.5%; r2 0.977) was internally validated, with a mean underestimation of 0.46% (SE, 2.0%). In this study, we successfully developed a popPK model and two LSSs that could be implemented in clinical practice to assist TDM of levofloxacin. (This study has been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under identifier NCT01918397.)
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Citations: 24
Authors: 11
Affiliations: 7
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Study Design
Cross Sectional Study