A Pooled Population Pharmacokinetic Study of Oral and Intravenous Administration of Clavulanic Acid in Neonates and Infants: Targeting Effective Beta-Lactamase Inhibition.
Stef SchouwenburgFleur M KeijGerdien A Tramper-StandersRené F KornelisseIrwin K M ReissPieter A J G de CockEvelyn DhontKevin M WattAnouk E MullerRobert B FlintBirgit C P KochKarel AllegaertTim PreijersPublished in: Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics (2024)
Data published on the oral clavulanic acid pharmacokinetics in the pediatric population is lacking. This research aimed to describe clavulanic acid disposition following oral and intravenous administration and to provide insights into clavulanic acid exposure based on threshold concentrations for (pre-)term neonates and infants. This pooled population pharmacokinetic study combined four datasets for analysis in NONMEM v7.4.3. Clavulanic acid exposure was simulated using the percentage of time above the threshold concentrations (%fT > C T ). Multiple dosage regimens and amoxicillin/clavulanic acid dosage ratios were evaluated. The cohort consisted of 89 (42 oral, 47 intravenous) subjects (403 samples) with a median (range) postnatal age 54.5 days (0-365), gestational age 37.4 weeks (23.0-41.7), and current bodyweight 3.9 kg (0.6-9.0). A one-compartment model with first-order absorption best described clavulanic acid pharmacokinetics with postnatal age as a covariate on the inter-individual variability of clearance. Oral bioavailability was 24.4% in neonates up to 10 days of age. An oral dosing regimen 90 mg/kg/day amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (4:1 ratio) resulted in 40.2% of simulated patients achieving 100% fT > C T,2mg/L . An amoxicillin/clavulanic acid ratio of 4:1 is preferred for neonatal oral regimens due to the higher exposure along the entire %fT > C T range (0-100%) as ratios higher than 4:1 might result in inadequate exposure. Our results highlight substantial exposure differences (%fT > C T ) when using threshold concentrations of 1 mg/L vs. 2 mg/L. This first population pharmacokinetic model for clavulanic acid in neonates may serve as a foundational step for future research, once more precise clavulanic acid targets become available.