Intravenous Vancomycin Is Associated With the Development of Nephrotoxicity in Patients With Class III Obesity.

Link to article at PubMed

Intravenous Vancomycin Is Associated With the Development of Nephrotoxicity in Patients With Class III Obesity.

Ann Pharmacother. 2017 Jul 01;:1060028017720946

Authors: Choi YC, Saw S, Soliman D, Bingham AL, Pontiggia L, Hunter K, Chuang L, Siemianowski LA, Ereshefsky B, Hollands JM

Abstract
BACKGROUND: A consensus statement recommends initial intravenous (IV) vancomycin dosing of 15-20 mg/kg every 8- 24 hours, with an optional 25- to 30-mg/kg loading dose. Although some studies have shown an association between weight and the development of vancomycin-associated nephrotoxicity, results have been inconsistent.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the correlation between incidence of nephrotoxicity associated with weight-based IV vancomycin dosing strategies in nonobese and obese patients.
METHODS: This retrospective cohort study evaluated hospitalized adult patients admitted who received IV vancomycin. Patients were stratified into nonobese (body mass index [BMI] <25 kg/m(2)), obesity class I and II (BMI 30-39.9kg/m(2)), and obesity class III (BMI≥40 kg/m(2)) groups; patients who were overweight but not obese were excluded. Incidence of nephrotoxicity and serum vancomycin trough concentrations were evaluated.
RESULTS: Of a total of 62 documented cases of nephrotoxicity (15.1%), 13 (8.7%), 23 (14.3%), and 26 (26.3%) cases were observed in nonobese, obesity class I and II, and obesity class III groups, respectively ( P=0.002). Longer durations of therapy ( P<0.0001), higher initial maintenance doses in both total milligrams/day ( P=0.0137) and milligrams/kilogram ( P=0.0307), and any trough level >20 mg/L ( P<0.0001) were identified as predictors of development of nephrotoxicity. Concomitant administration of piperacillin/tazobactam, diuretics, and IV contrast were associated with development of nephrotoxicity ( P<0.005, all). Patients with class III obesity were 3-times as likely to develop nephrotoxicity when compared with nonobese patients (odds ratio [OR]=2.99; CI=1.12-7.94) and obesity class I and II patients (OR=3.14; CI=1.27-7.75).
CONCLUSIONS: Obesity and other factors are associated with a higher risk of vancomycin-associated nephrotoxicity.

PMID: 28709394 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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