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    Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2008 Apr;27(4):330-4.

    Single-dose pharmacokinetics of daptomycin in children with suspected or proved gram-positive infections.

    Source

    Division of Pediatric Clinical Pharmacology and Medical Toxicology, The Children's Mercy Hospital, University of Missouri, Kansas City, MO 64108, USA.

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND:

    New antimicrobials such as daptomycin fill a void in the growing need for antibiotics effective against resistant Gram-positive pathogens. Although the pharmacokinetics of daptomycin have been well characterized in adults, no studies have evaluated the pharmacokinetics and tolerability in a pediatric population.

    METHODS:

    Twenty-five children (12-17 years, n = 8; 7-11 years, n = 8; 2-6 years, n = 9) were enrolled in this multicenter, open-label study. Daptomycin was administered as a single 4-mg/kg intravenous dose followed by repeated blood sampling for 24 hours. Daptomycin was quantitated from plasma using a validated high performance liquid chromatography method and pharmacokinetic variables determined using a model-dependent approach.

    RESULTS:

    Daptomycin systemic exposure decreased with decreasing age, reflecting more rapid rates of clearance in younger children. Total body exposure estimates in adolescents were approximately 1.7x those observed in children <6 years of age (374.4 versus 215.3 microg*h/L), they were comparable to those observed in adult historic controls. Estimates of apparent elimination half-life averaged 6.7 hours in adolescents, 5.6 hours in children 7-11 years of age, and 5.3 hours in children <6 years of age. One child had an adverse event (infusion site reaction) considered to be related to study drug.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    Systemic drug exposure after a single weight-adjusted daptomycin dose is reduced in younger children compared with adolescents and adults consequent to an apparent age-associated change in total plasma clearance.

    PMID:
    18316988
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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