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High-Dosage Fosfomycin Results in Adequate Plasma and Target-Site Exposure in Morbidly Obese and Nonobese Nonhyperfiltration Patients.

David BusseP SimonD PetroffN El-NajjarL SchmittD BindelliniA DietrichMarkus ZeitlingerW HuisingaRobin MicheletH WriggeC Kloft
Published in: Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy (2022)
The objectives of this study were the identification in (morbidly) obese and nonobese patients of (i) the most appropriate body size descriptor for fosfomycin dose adjustments and (ii) adequacy of the currently employed dosing regimens. Plasma and target site (interstitial fluid of subcutaneous adipose tissue) concentrations after fosfomycin administration (8 g) to 30 surgery patients (15 obese/15 nonobese) were obtained from a prospective clinical trial. After characterization of plasma and microdialysis-derived target site pharmacokinetics via population analysis, short-term infusions of fosfomycin 3 to 4 times daily were simulated. The adequacy of therapy was assessed by probability of pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic target attainment (PTA) analysis based on the unbound drug-related targets of an % f T >MIC (the fraction of time that unbound fosfomycin concentrations exceed the MIC during 24 h) of 70 and an f AUC 0-24h /MIC (the area under the concentration-time curve from 0 to 24 h for the unbound fraction of fosfomycin relative to the MIC) of 40.8 to 83.3. Lean body weight, fat mass, and creatinine clearance calculated via adjusted body weight (ABW) (CLCR CG_ABW ) of all patients (body mass index [BMI] = 20.1 to 52.0 kg/m 2 ) explained a considerable proportion of between-patient pharmacokinetic variability (up to 31.0% relative reduction). The steady-state unbound target site/plasma concentration ratio was 26.3% lower in (morbidly) obese than nonobese patients. For infections with fosfomycin-susceptible pathogens (MIC ≤ 16 mg/L), intermittent "high-dosage" intravenous (i.v.) fosfomycin (8 g, three times daily) was sufficient to treat patients with a CLCR CG_ABW of <130 mL/min, irrespective of the pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic indices considered. For infections by Pseudomonas aeruginosa with a MIC of 32 mg/L, when the index f AUC 0-24h /MIC is applied, fosfomycin might represent a promising treatment option in obese and nonobese patients, especially in combination therapy to complement β-lactams, in which carbapenem-resistant P. aeruginosa is critical. In conclusion, fosfomycin showed excellent target site penetration in obese and nonobese patients. Dosing should be guided by renal function rather than obesity status. (This study has been registered in the EU Clinical Trials Register under EudraCT no. 2012-004383-22.).
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