Pharmacokinetics/ Pharmacodynamics (PK/PD) Study of Vancomycin
Blood Stream Infections, Endocarditis, MRSA
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Blood Stream Infections focused on measuring Pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics, vancomycin, blood stream infections, Chinese patients, MRSA
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Age ≥18 years, male or female;
- diagnosed as MRSA septicemia or endocarditis; Septicemia clinical manifestations of infection; MRSA infection confirmed by blood culture; Endocarditis: diagnosed according to modified Duke Criteria
- no therapy with effective anti-MRSA drugs 72 hours prior to the study; Effective anti-MRSA drugs used in China include: vancomycin, norvancomycin, teicoplanin, linezolid, daptomycin, tigecycline, and fusidic acid.
Exclusion Criteria:
- those being allergic to glycopeptides antibiotics;
- those with osteomyelitis, central nervous system infection or other septic migrations (except for endocarditis);
- patients with catheter-related bloodstream infection who cannot withdraw catheter;
- those during chemotherapy for cancer or leukemia;
- those with agranulocytosis;
- those with HIV infection;
- women in pregnancy or lactation;
- patients receiving vancomycin for less than 72 hours;
- patients participating in any other clinical trial in 3 months prior to the study (not limited to trials for antibiotics)
Sites / Locations
- Yong-Hong XiaoRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Experimental
MRSA blood stream infection patient
Intervention:Vancomycin Dosing: 15-20mg/kg, IV,q 12~8h (or 1 g, IV, q12~8h) for adult patient with normal renal function; Dosage should be adjusted by blood creatinine clearance in patients with impaired renal function; Administration route: 1~2 h/ dosing, IV Drug combination: Drug combination is not recommended for patients with simple MRSA infection; Rifampicin can be combined in case of MRSA artificial valve endocarditis; Anti-G- antibacterial agents can be combined in case of concurrent G- bacterial infections. Duration: Septicemia: 2~4 weeks Endocarditis: 6~8 weeks