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Improving Therapeutic Drug Monitoring and Dosing for Vancomycin in Young Infants With Infections (VANCAPP) (Part 2)

M

Murdoch Childrens Research Institute

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 4

Conditions

Bacteremia
Infections
Sepsis

Treatments

Other: First-dose trough dose adjustment calculator - using early TDM (first-dose trough) to determine an early dose adjustment if the predicted steady-state trough is outside of target range (10-20mg/L)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05770622
HREC2019.059 (part 2)

Details and patient eligibility

About

A challenge to intermittent vancomycin dosing in young infants is the avoidable delay caused by the need to wait until steady state (i.e. when the drug concentrations are in equilibrium) to measure a vancomycin concentration, as this generally occurs 24 to 48 hours after starting treatment. If the target concentration is not achieved, the dose needs to be adjusted, resulting in further delays in an infant achieving the concentration required to treat their infection. The purpose of this study is to assess the use of early therapeutic drug monitoring (first-dose trough) and, if needed, early dose adjustment, in achieving target vancomycin concentrations at steady state. A dose adjustment calculator (available through a web application) will be used to determine the need for dose adjustment (based on predicted steady state concentration) and recommend an adjusted dose if required.

Full description

Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) for vancomycin is done once the drug is in steady state. In young infants, this occurs at 24-48hours after commencing vancomycin. If the concentration at steady state is not in therapeutic range (10-20 mg/L), the dose is adjusted and the concentration measured again 24 hour later. Using empiric vancomycin dosing regimens, fewer than 50% of infants achieve the target concentration at their first steady state level. Therefore once the dose is adjusted and concentration repeated, there is a delay of at least 48 hours before adequate antibiotic concentrations are achieved in the blood - delaying optimal treatment of life-threatening infections. This study aims to use early TDM and dose adjustment to improve the proportion of infants achieving target concentrations at their first steady-state level.

Using a published population pharmacokinetic model, we identified a linear relationship between the first-dose trough and steady-state trough (R2 = 0.51) as well as the first-dose trough and AUC24 at 48 hours (R2= 0.70). This suggests that TDM could be performed after the first dose and that this early trough level could be used to predict the steady state level, enabling earlier dose adjustment and thereby shortening the time to effective therapy. This model has therefore been used to develop an online 'First-dose trough dose adjustment calculator'.

In the VANC APP (Part 2)* study, participants will have individualised model-based intermittent vancomycin dosing using the Vanc App dosing calculator (as used in VANC APP Part 1, see clinicaltrials.gov ID: NCT04044703). A first-dose trough concentration will be measured for each participant and the clinician will then enter that concentration into the web application ('First-dose trough dose adjustment calculator'). A dose adjustment will be generated by the calculator if the predicted steady-state level is outside of target range. The vancomycin concentration is then measured at steady state to determine if the target concentration has been achieved.

*Note: This study is 'part 2' of the VANC APP study protocol as approved under HREC reference number HREC/51942/RCHM-2019. Part 1 was registered separately on clinicaltrials.gov (clinicaltrials.gov ID: NCT04044703). Part 1 has been completed and assessed the use of model-based individualised intermittent vancomycin dosing using the Vanc App dosing calculator in 40 young infants aged 0 to 90 days. The vancomycin concentration was measured at steady state (24-48 hours) to determine the proportion of infants achieving target concentrations. Part 1 and part 2 are two separate studies and the results of each part will not be directly compared to one another.

Enrollment

40 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

Under 90 days old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Infants aged 0 - 90 days old
  • Suspected infection requiring treatment with vancomycin for 48 hours or more (as determined by the clinical team)

Exclusion criteria

  • Infants with a corrected gestational age of less than 25 weeks
  • Infants weighing less than 500g.
  • Known allergy to any glycopeptide antibiotic
  • Vancomycin administered within the previous 72 hours
  • Infants receiving any form of extracorporeal life support
  • Renal impairment

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

40 participants in 1 patient group

Vancomycin first-dose trough dose adjustment calculation
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will have individualised model-based intermittent vancomycin dosing using the Vanc App dosing calculator (as used in VANC APP Part 1, see clinicaltrials.gov ID: NCT04044703). A first-dose trough concentration will be measured for each participant and the clinician will then enter that concentration into the web application ('First-dose trough dose adjustment calculator'). A dose adjustment will be generated by the calculator if the predicted steady-state level is outside of target range. If the predicted steady-state level is within target range (10-20mg/L) the calculator will recommend continuing with the same dose. The vancomycin concentration is then measured at steady state to determine if the target concentration has been achieved.
Treatment:
Other: First-dose trough dose adjustment calculator - using early TDM (first-dose trough) to determine an early dose adjustment if the predicted steady-state trough is outside of target range (10-20mg/L)

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Central trial contact

Amanda Gwee, MBBS; Amanda Wilkins, MBBS

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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