National survey of extended-interval aminoglycoside dosing
- PMID: 10722424
- DOI: 10.1086/313692
National survey of extended-interval aminoglycoside dosing
Abstract
A random sample survey of 500 acute care hospitals in the United States was conducted to evaluate the adoption of extended-interval aminoglycoside dosing (EIAD). The survey revealed that EIAD has been adopted in 3 of every 4 acute care hospitals, a 4-fold increase since 1993. Of the 74.7% of hospitals reporting EIAD, 64% had written guidelines. Equal or less toxicity (87.1%), equal efficacy (76.9%), and cost-savings (65.6%) were common rationales. There has been a trend toward higher adult dosages of gentamicin (e.g., >5 mg/kg/dose) and an increase in the adoption of EIAD across all age groups (neonatal, 11%, and pediatric, 23%). Monitoring of aminoglycoside concentrations has shifted to a single determination of concentration, at 6-18 h after drug administration. The most common methods of dosage adjustment for declining renal function were an interval extension with the same dose (47%) or use of the Hartford nomogram (32%).
Comment in
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Single daily dosing of aminoglycosides--A community standard?Clin Infect Dis. 2000 Mar;30(3):440-1. doi: 10.1086/313736. Clin Infect Dis. 2000. PMID: 10722425 No abstract available.
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