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Population Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of Beta-lactams of Interest in Adult Patients From Intensive Care Units (Pop-PK/PD)

Primary Purpose

Pharmacokinetics, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Infection, Bacterial

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
Belgium
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
blood sampling
Tissue sampling (lung)
Collection of fluid samples
Sponsored by
Université Catholique de Louvain
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional other trial for Pharmacokinetics focused on measuring temocillin, ceftriaxone, meropenem, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, Intensive Care, dosing, total concentration, free concentration

Eligibility Criteria

18 Years - undefined (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Patients with suspicion or documentation of of an infection requiring intravenous antibiotic therapy (this includes any patient admitted to the Intensive Care Unit for an infection (or developing an infection) that calls for administration of temocillin, ceftriaxone or meropenem).

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Patients allergic to β-lactams
  • IgE-mediated hypersensibility to penicillins
  • any biological abnormality that the attending physician considers as susceptible to delay or perturb in a significant manner the interpretation of the trial
  • lack of accepted informed consent
  • patient with therapeutic limitations

Sites / Locations

  • Cliniques universitaires Saint-LucRecruiting

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm Type

Experimental

Experimental

Arm Label

Sampling if GFR = or > 30 mL/min

Sampling if GFR < 30 mL/min

Arm Description

Note: GFR = Glomerular Filtration Rate Patients with a normal of moderately decreased renal function Temocillin: 6 g in continuous infusion over 24 h; Ceftriaxone: bolus 2 g (in 30 min) every 12h Meropenem: prolonged infusion (3 h) of 2 g every 8h Blood sampling for antibiotic (temocillin, ceftriaxone or meropenem) pharmacokinetic analysis / Tissue sampling (lung) for determination of antibiotic content when possible / Collection of fluid samples (bronchoalveolar lavage, drainage fluid) for determination of antibiotic concentration when possible

Patients with severe renal insufficiency or hemodialysis: Temocillin: 6 g in continuous infusion over 24 h; Ceftriaxone: bolus 2 g (in 30 min) every 12h Meropenem: prolonged infusion (3 h) of 2 g every 8h Blood sampling for antibiotic (temocillin, ceftriaxone or meropenem) pharmacokinetic analysis / Tissue sampling (lung) for determination of antibiotic content if possible / Collection of fluid samples (bronchoalveolar lavage, drainage fluid) for determination of antibiotic concentration if possible

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Impact of renal function on total plasma concentrations
Measurement of total plasma antibiotic concentrations (measurement by a validated HPLC-MS-MS after suitable extraction; no predefined value set [exploratory])

Secondary Outcome Measures

Impact of the plasma protein concentration and of their nature on the free concentration of antibiotics
Measurement of antibiotic plasma free concentrations and analysis of plasma protein profiles (measurement by a validated HPLC-MS-MS after suitable extraction; no predefined value set [exploratory])
Tissular and fluid penetration of antibiotics (total)
Measurement of total concentrations of antibiotics in tissue samples and fluids (bronchoalveolar lavage, drainage fluids) when obtained (measurement by a validated HPLC-MS-MS after suitable extraction; no predefined value set [exploratory])
Tissular and fluid penetration of antibiotics (free)
Measurement of free concentrations of antibiotics in tissue samples and fluids (bronchoalveolar lavage, drainage fluids) when obtained (measurement by a validated HPLC-MS-MS after suitable extraction; no predefined value set [exploratory])
Pharmacokinetic analysis and population pharmacokinetics: Cmax (total and free)
Analysis of the antibiotic pharmacokinetic profiles by means of appropriate software to calculate the actual mean and median values of the total and free plasma Cmax of temocillin (in mg/L) in the study population and to determine their value in a simulated population (Monte Carlo simulations; 1000 simulated patients)
Pharmacokinetic analysis and population pharmacokinetics: Cmin (total and free)
Analysis of the antibiotic pharmacokinetic profiles by means of appropriate software to calculate the actual mean and median values of the total and free plasma Cmin of temocillin (in mg/L) in the study population and to determine their values in a simulated population (Monte Carlo simulations; 1000 simulated patients)
Pharmacokinetic analysis and population pharmacokinetics: time above a critical concentration value for total and free concentrations
Analysis of the antibiotic pharmacokinetic profiles by means of appropriate software to calculate the actual mean and median values of the fraction of the time between two successive drug administrations during which the total and free plasma concentrations of temocillin remain above a critical value ( "S" breakpoint of the corresponding antibiotic [temocillin: British Society of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy [BSAC] or Belgian Summary of Product Characteristics [SmPC] value; ceftriaxone and meropenem: European Committee for Antimicrobials Susceptibility Testing [EUCAST] value]) in the study population, and to determine its value in a simulated population (Monte Carlo simulations; 1000 simulated patients)
Covariables analysis: biometric values: weight
Assessment of the impact of patient's weight [in kg]
Covariables analysis: biometric values: height
Assessment of the impact of patient's height [in cm]
Covariables analysis: biometric values: age
Assessment of the impact of patient's age [in years]
Covariables analysis: biochemical data: serum total protein and albumin
Assessment of the impact of total serum protein [in g/L] and total serum albumin [in g/L].
Covariables analysis: biochemical data: elevation hepatic transaminases
Assessment of the impact the elevation of the hepatic transaminases [in international units/L, with reference fo the local normal values]
Covariables analysis: biochemical data: blood urea and creatinine
Assessment of the impact of the urea [in mol/L] and creatinine [in mg/L]) blood levels
Covariable analysis: clinical status with respect to infection
clinical status of the patient (in 3 categories: moderately severe infection; severe infection; life-threatening infection) as per the judgment of the attending physician
Covariable analysis: renal function
renal function based on calculated glomerular filtration with a dichotomic cut-off at < 30 ml/min or above

Full Information

First Posted
January 18, 2018
Last Updated
May 24, 2022
Sponsor
Université Catholique de Louvain
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03440216
Brief Title
Population Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of Beta-lactams of Interest in Adult Patients From Intensive Care Units
Acronym
Pop-PK/PD
Official Title
Population Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of Beta-lactams of Interest in Adult Patients From Intensive Care Units
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
May 2022
Overall Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Study Start Date
March 15, 2018 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
October 15, 2022 (Anticipated)
Study Completion Date
December 15, 2022 (Anticipated)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Principal Investigator
Name of the Sponsor
Université Catholique de Louvain

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
Yes

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
Antibiotics are still most often administered on an empiric fashion, as defined for the general population with dosages only adapted based on weight and renal and/or hepatic functions. As a result, serum concentrations show important interpatient variations with the risk of being subtherapeutic or toxic. Recent studies with temocillin, ceftriaxone, or meropenem confirm this for patients in intensive care units. The aim of the study will be to measure the total and free concentrations of temocillin, ceftriaxone, and meropenem in patients hospitalized in Intensive Care Units for pulmonary infections or another infection for which one of the above mentioned antibiotics is indicated. Patients will be stratified according to the level of their renal function. The antibiotics will be assayed in plasma as well as other accessible fluids in order to assess their pharmacokinetic properties.
Detailed Description
Background, Literature Survey and Justification of The Study 1.1. Introduction β-lactams efficacy depends primarily from the time interval during which the plasma concentration remains above the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the antibiotic against the target organism(s) (Craig, 1998). It is generally accepted that the free concentration of the antibiotic must remain above the MIC for at least 40 to 70% of the interval between two successive administrations, and should even reach 100% for severe infections in patients hospitalized in Intensive Care Units (MacGowan, 2011). The free concentration must reach a value of 4 x the MIC for 40 to 70% (Mohd Hafiz et al., 2012) or even 100 % (Tam et al., 2005) of the dosing interval in order to prevent the emergence of resistance. Due to the large inter- and intraindividual variations between patients, it is difficult to reach the desired concentrations if relying only on usual dosage recommendations and/or using standard dosing regimens. Moreover, Intensive Care patients are difficult patients in this context (Roberts et al., 2014) due to gross perturbations related to underlying diseases and abnormalities (arterial hypertension, cardiac rhythm alterations, renal and/or hepatic insufficiency) and the necessary interventions (artificial ventilation, surgery, artificial feeding, and so on…). They also show important variations in the level of plasma proteins and rapid and unpredictable fluctuations of their renal function (Beumier et al., 2015; Goncalves-Pereira and Povoa, 2011; Roberts and Lipman, 2009), all of which are known to modulate the pharmacokinetics of β-lactams (Goncalves-Pereira and Povoa, 2011; Hayashi et al., 2013; Sime et al., 2012; Udy et al., 2012; Wong et al., 2013). The concentration of the free fraction will be especially modified for those β-lactams with large protein binding such as temocillin or ceftriaxone (Schleibinger et al., 2015; Ulldemolins et al., 2011; Van Dalen et al., 1987; Wong et al., 2013), but may also be altered for β-lactams that are mainly excreted via the renal route (temocillin, ceftriaxone, meropenem) (Carlier et al., 2013; Simon et al., 2006; Vandecasteele et al., 2015). 1.2. Clinical Interest of temocillin, ceftriaxone and meropenem and State of the Art Concerning their dosing Temocillin is a carboxypenicillin with useful activity against Gram-negative bacteria (excluding P. aeruginosa) and with a large stability towards most β-lactamases, including ESBL), AmpC cephalosporinases, and some carbapenemases (Livermore et al., 2006; Zykov et al., 2016). Temocillin may stand as an alternative to carbapenems (Balakrishnan et al., 2011; Livermore and Tulkens, 2009). About 85% of temocillin in plasma is protein-bound and about 80% of the administered dose is eliminated in 24 h under an intact form by glomerular filtration and tubular secretion (Temocillin Summary of Product Characteristics [SmPC], 2015) Ceftriaxone shows a moderately enlarged spectrum of activity and is stable towards certain β-lactamases but not to ESBLs, AmpC cephalosporinases and certain carbapenemases (Suankratay et al., 2008). It is an alternative to carbapenems when dealing with an infection with susceptible organisms (Paradis et al., 1992). Its protein binding is about 95%, and its elimination is mainly via the renal route (50 to 60% under an unchanged form) with the remaining eliminated via the bile to form microbiologically inactive metabolites (Ceftriaxone SmPC, 2015). Meropenem shows a very large spectrum and is used in empiric therapy when fearing the presence of ESBL-producing organisms to which other antibiotics are resistant (Zykov et al., 2016). Meropenem has an unpredictable pharmacokinetic profile in patients with renal insufficiency or under hemodialysis (Carlier et al., 2013; Goncalves-Pereira et al., 2014). Meropenem is mainly excreted via the renal route (50 - 75 % under an unchanged form; SmPC meropenem, 2014). Antibiotic are often prescribed empirically with doses based on what has been found appropriate for the general population, with some adaptation for weight and renal and/or hepatic function. As for any drug, however, there is increasing evidence that the concentrations observed after administration of a standard dose are actually highly variable and often different from the expected ones, leading to risks of sub-therapeutic or toxic effects. Recent studies have shown that an intravenous administration of 6 g of temocillin by continuous infusion (Laterre et al., 2015), of 4 g of ceftriaxone in two administrations at 12 h interval (Roberts et al., 2007; Salvador et al., 1983), or of 6 g of meropenem in 3 administrations by prolonged infusion (3 h) at 8 h interval (Dulhunty et al., 2013; Frippiat et al., 2015; Jamal et al., 2015), allow to reach free plasma concentrations of 4 x the MIC against susceptible organisms during 40-70%, or even 100% of the dosing interval, with, however, large inter-individual variations, especially for molecules with high protein biding (temocillin, ceftriaxone) due to variations in their renal elimination. Very little information is available about their tissue levels but it is suspected that large inter-individual variations are also frequent. Study Objectives The goal is to measure the total and free concentrations of the antibiotics in plasma, accessible body fluids and, if possible, tissues after intravenous administration of: temocillin: 6 g by continuous infusion over 24 h; ceftriaxone: bolus administration of 2 g in a 30 min infusion twice daily; meropenem: prolonged infusion (3 h) of 2 g three times daily. These doses will be adjusted in patients based on their renal function. Primary objective: To calculate and assess the values of key pharmacokinetic parameters (total clearance, volume of distribution, constants of elimination, plasma and tissue total exposure, and maximal and minimal plasma and body fluid concentrations. Secondary objectives: the correlation between the plasma protein profile and the actual free antibiotic concentrations; the impact of the alterations of the renal function on the free and total plasma concentrations of the antibiotics; the impact of the level and nature of circulating proteins on the free fraction of the antibiotics; the extent of the tissular penetration of the antibiotics (in accessible samples) and of their penetration in pertinent body fluids (bronchoalveolar lavage, drainage and ascites fluids. to model the population pharmacokinetics of the antibiotics in the whole set of patients included in the study; to investigate and assess the influence of co-variates (using biometric, biochemical and clinical data) on the variability of the individual pharmacokinetic profiles. Outcome measures • Primary Outcome Measure: Impact of renal function on total plasma concentrations (Measurement of total plasma antibiotic concentrations) • Secondary Outcome Measures: Impact of the plasma protein concentration and of their nature on the free concentration of antibiotics Tissular and fluid penetration of antibiotics (lung tissue, bronchoalveolar lavage, drainage fluids) Pharmacokinetic modeling Co-variates analysis Conduct of the Study 4.1. Eligible patients Patients hospitalized in Intensive Care Units and treated for pulmonary or abdominal infection, septicemia, or any other infection calling for the prescription of one of the three antibiotics mentioned above. 4.2. Study groups Patients will be divided in two groups: : Group 1: patients with a glomerular filtration rate (GFR) ≥ 30 mL/min Group 2: patients with renal insufficiency or under hemodialysis 4.3. Safety considerations The three β-lactams have each a long record of safe use in patients hospitalized in Intensive Care Units but may cause an alteration of the commensal flora, allergic reactions, neurotoxicity (at high doses). Ceftriaxone may case hemolytic anemia. 4.4. Exclusion criteria Patients of <18 years Allergy to β-lactams Hypersensitivity to penicillin (IgE-mediated) Any biological abnormality considered by the attending physician as susceptible to interfere in a significant manner on the interpretation of the data Absence of consensus Therapeutic limitation 4.5. Treatment duration: 7 days except for deep, non-controlled foci (extended to 10-14 days). 4.6. Follow up: First visit (visit #1) to determine eligibility criteria. Additional visits: each day during the treatment period. Calculation of the number of patients As this is a descriptive pharmacokinetic study without formal predefined hypothesis, no calculation of the size of the population has been made. Based on literature data and the experience of the investigators, a total of 20 patients in each arm should be sufficient to draw meaningful conclusions. Sampling and processing of samples Sampling of serum and body fluids: typically at equilibrium for all three antibiotics, and at fixed times after administration of the bolus (ceftriaxone) or the prolonged infusion (meropenem), and performed by a research nurse according to a predefined schedule. Sampling of tissues: by Medical personnel when justified for diagnostic or treatment reasons. All samples will transferred to the laboratory where they will be treated using predefined and validated protocols. Antibiotic assay: validated liquid chromatography - mass spectrometry methods (protocols and performance of the assay methods available upon request). The free fraction of each antibiotic will be measured after separation of the bound fraction by molecular sieving (Ngougni Pokem et al., 2015). Statistical analysis and data analysis Pharmacokinetic analyses will be performed using either NONMEM (NONlinear Mixed Effect Modeling) (http://www.iconplc.com/innovation/nonmem/ ) or PMETRICS (http://www.lapk.org/pmetrics.php) software. Mono-, bi-, and tri-compartmental models will be tested using plasma, tissular and body fluids antibiotic free and total antibiotic concentrations. The First-Order Conditional Estimation with Interaction (FOCE-I) method will be used to assess the objective functions (Jaruratanasirikul et al., 2015) in order to select the most appropriate model for the calculation of the pharmacokinetic parameters (Roberts et al. 2009). Confidentiality and Rights of patients. The identity and the personal data of the patients will remain confidential according to the applicable Belgian Law Before enrollment, each patient (or his/her guardian) will provide a written informed consent. Each enrolled patients (or his/her guardian) will be allowed to withdraw from the study at any time without impact on his/her treatment. Contacts All questions concerning the study can be addressed to the responsible investigator: Professor Pr Pierre-François Laterre (phone: 00-32-2-764- 2733 (Intensive Care Unit) or 764-2735 (direct) at the Cliniques universitaire St Luc, Brussels, Belgium the associated investigators: Professor Françoise Van Bambeke (phone: 00-32-2-764-7378) and Pharm. Perrin Ngougni Pokem (phone 00-32-2-764-7225) at the Université catholique de Louvain (Louvain Drug Research Institute), Brussels, Belgium.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Pharmacokinetics, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Infection, Bacterial, Infections, Respiratory, Infection, Drug Monitoring
Keywords
temocillin, ceftriaxone, meropenem, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, Intensive Care, dosing, total concentration, free concentration

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Other
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Parallel Assignment
Model Description
2 groups of patients studied in parallel
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
Non-Randomized
Enrollment
20 (Anticipated)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Sampling if GFR = or > 30 mL/min
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Note: GFR = Glomerular Filtration Rate Patients with a normal of moderately decreased renal function Temocillin: 6 g in continuous infusion over 24 h; Ceftriaxone: bolus 2 g (in 30 min) every 12h Meropenem: prolonged infusion (3 h) of 2 g every 8h Blood sampling for antibiotic (temocillin, ceftriaxone or meropenem) pharmacokinetic analysis / Tissue sampling (lung) for determination of antibiotic content when possible / Collection of fluid samples (bronchoalveolar lavage, drainage fluid) for determination of antibiotic concentration when possible
Arm Title
Sampling if GFR < 30 mL/min
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Patients with severe renal insufficiency or hemodialysis: Temocillin: 6 g in continuous infusion over 24 h; Ceftriaxone: bolus 2 g (in 30 min) every 12h Meropenem: prolonged infusion (3 h) of 2 g every 8h Blood sampling for antibiotic (temocillin, ceftriaxone or meropenem) pharmacokinetic analysis / Tissue sampling (lung) for determination of antibiotic content if possible / Collection of fluid samples (bronchoalveolar lavage, drainage fluid) for determination of antibiotic concentration if possible
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
blood sampling
Other Intervention Name(s)
temocillin, ceftriaxone, meropenem
Intervention Description
temocillin: blood sampling every day for 7 days ceftriaxone: blood sampling 12h after administration for 7 days meropenem: blood sampling at 1h, 3h, 5h and 8h after initiation of the administration at days 1 and 2; one sampling at 8h on days 3 to 7
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
Tissue sampling (lung)
Other Intervention Name(s)
temocillin, ceftriaxone, meropenem
Intervention Description
Sampling of tissue (lung) when possible during treatment for measurement of the content in antibiotic (temocillin, ceftriaxone, or meropenem, depending on the drug received by the patient)
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
Collection of fluid samples
Other Intervention Name(s)
temocillin, ceftriaxone, meropenem
Intervention Description
Collection of fluid samples (bronchoalveolar lavage, drainage fluid) for determination of antibiotic ((temocillin, ceftriaxone, or meropenem, depending on the drug received by the patient) concentration when possible during treatment
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Impact of renal function on total plasma concentrations
Description
Measurement of total plasma antibiotic concentrations (measurement by a validated HPLC-MS-MS after suitable extraction; no predefined value set [exploratory])
Time Frame
36 months
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Impact of the plasma protein concentration and of their nature on the free concentration of antibiotics
Description
Measurement of antibiotic plasma free concentrations and analysis of plasma protein profiles (measurement by a validated HPLC-MS-MS after suitable extraction; no predefined value set [exploratory])
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Tissular and fluid penetration of antibiotics (total)
Description
Measurement of total concentrations of antibiotics in tissue samples and fluids (bronchoalveolar lavage, drainage fluids) when obtained (measurement by a validated HPLC-MS-MS after suitable extraction; no predefined value set [exploratory])
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Tissular and fluid penetration of antibiotics (free)
Description
Measurement of free concentrations of antibiotics in tissue samples and fluids (bronchoalveolar lavage, drainage fluids) when obtained (measurement by a validated HPLC-MS-MS after suitable extraction; no predefined value set [exploratory])
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Pharmacokinetic analysis and population pharmacokinetics: Cmax (total and free)
Description
Analysis of the antibiotic pharmacokinetic profiles by means of appropriate software to calculate the actual mean and median values of the total and free plasma Cmax of temocillin (in mg/L) in the study population and to determine their value in a simulated population (Monte Carlo simulations; 1000 simulated patients)
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Pharmacokinetic analysis and population pharmacokinetics: Cmin (total and free)
Description
Analysis of the antibiotic pharmacokinetic profiles by means of appropriate software to calculate the actual mean and median values of the total and free plasma Cmin of temocillin (in mg/L) in the study population and to determine their values in a simulated population (Monte Carlo simulations; 1000 simulated patients)
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Pharmacokinetic analysis and population pharmacokinetics: time above a critical concentration value for total and free concentrations
Description
Analysis of the antibiotic pharmacokinetic profiles by means of appropriate software to calculate the actual mean and median values of the fraction of the time between two successive drug administrations during which the total and free plasma concentrations of temocillin remain above a critical value ( "S" breakpoint of the corresponding antibiotic [temocillin: British Society of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy [BSAC] or Belgian Summary of Product Characteristics [SmPC] value; ceftriaxone and meropenem: European Committee for Antimicrobials Susceptibility Testing [EUCAST] value]) in the study population, and to determine its value in a simulated population (Monte Carlo simulations; 1000 simulated patients)
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Covariables analysis: biometric values: weight
Description
Assessment of the impact of patient's weight [in kg]
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Covariables analysis: biometric values: height
Description
Assessment of the impact of patient's height [in cm]
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Covariables analysis: biometric values: age
Description
Assessment of the impact of patient's age [in years]
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Covariables analysis: biochemical data: serum total protein and albumin
Description
Assessment of the impact of total serum protein [in g/L] and total serum albumin [in g/L].
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Covariables analysis: biochemical data: elevation hepatic transaminases
Description
Assessment of the impact the elevation of the hepatic transaminases [in international units/L, with reference fo the local normal values]
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Covariables analysis: biochemical data: blood urea and creatinine
Description
Assessment of the impact of the urea [in mol/L] and creatinine [in mg/L]) blood levels
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Covariable analysis: clinical status with respect to infection
Description
clinical status of the patient (in 3 categories: moderately severe infection; severe infection; life-threatening infection) as per the judgment of the attending physician
Time Frame
36 months
Title
Covariable analysis: renal function
Description
renal function based on calculated glomerular filtration with a dichotomic cut-off at < 30 ml/min or above
Time Frame
36 months

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
18 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Patients with suspicion or documentation of of an infection requiring intravenous antibiotic therapy (this includes any patient admitted to the Intensive Care Unit for an infection (or developing an infection) that calls for administration of temocillin, ceftriaxone or meropenem). Exclusion Criteria: Patients allergic to β-lactams IgE-mediated hypersensibility to penicillins any biological abnormality that the attending physician considers as susceptible to delay or perturb in a significant manner the interpretation of the trial lack of accepted informed consent patient with therapeutic limitations
Central Contact Person:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
Pierre-François Laterre, MD
Phone
+3227642733
Email
pierre-francois.laterre@uclouvain.be
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
Françoise Van Bambeke, PharmD
Phone
+3227647378
Email
francoise.vanbambeke@uclouvain.be
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Pierre-François Laterre, MD
Organizational Affiliation
Université Catholique de Louvain
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc
City
Brussels
ZIP/Postal Code
1200
Country
Belgium
Individual Site Status
Recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Pierre F. Laterre, MD
Email
pierre-francois.laterre@uclouvain.be

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
No
IPD Sharing Plan Description
There is not a plan to make individual participant data (IPD) available.
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Population Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of Beta-lactams of Interest in Adult Patients From Intensive Care Units

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