Augmented renal clearance in pediatric intensive care: are we undertreating our sickest patients?

被引:54
|
作者
Dhont, Evelyn [1 ,2 ]
Van Der Heggen, Tatjana [3 ]
De Jaeger, Annick [1 ]
Vande Walle, Johan [3 ,4 ]
De Paepe, Peter [5 ]
De Cock, Pieter A. [1 ,5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Ghent Univ Hosp, Dept Pediat Intens Care, Ghent, Belgium
[2] Ghent Univ Hosp, Pediat Intens Care 1K12D, Heymanslaan 10, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium
[3] Ghent Univ Hosp, Dept Pediat, Ghent, Belgium
[4] Ghent Univ Hosp, Dept Pediat Nephrol, Ghent, Belgium
[5] Univ Ghent, Heymans Inst Pharmacol, Ghent, Belgium
[6] Ghent Univ Hosp, Dept Pharm, Ghent, Belgium
关键词
Children; Critical illness; Intensive care; Glomerular filtration rate; Augmented renal clearance; Renal drug clearance; GLOMERULAR-FILTRATION-RATE; CRITICALLY-ILL PATIENTS; 24-HOUR CREATININE CLEARANCE; BETA-TRACE-PROTEIN; SERUM CYSTATIN C; POPULATION PHARMACOKINETICS; DEVELOPMENTAL PHARMACOLOGY; VANCOMYCIN CLEARANCE; FEBRILE NEUTROPENIA; CONTINUOUS-INFUSION;
D O I
10.1007/s00467-018-4120-2
中图分类号
R72 [儿科学];
学科分类号
100202 ;
摘要
Many critically ill patients display a supraphysiological renal function with enhanced renal perfusion and glomerular hyperfiltration. This phenomenon described as augmented renal clearance (ARC) may result in enhanced drug elimination through renal excretion mechanisms. Augmented renal clearance seems to be triggered by systemic inflammation and therapeutic interventions in intensive care. There is growing evidence that ARC is not restricted to the adult intensive care population, but is also prevalent in critically ill children. Augmented renal clearance is often overlooked due to the lack of reliable methods to assess renal function in critically ill children. Standard equations to calculate glomerular filtration rate (GFR) are developed for patients who have a steady-state creatinine production and a stable renal function. Those formulas are not reliable in critically ill patients with acutely changing GFR and tend to underestimate true GFR in patients with ARC. Tools for real-time, continuous, and non-invasive measurement of fluctuating GFR are most needed to identify changes in kidney function during critical illness and therapeutic interventions. Such devices are currently being validated and hold a strong potential to become the standard of practice. In the meantime, urinary creatinine clearance is considered the most reliable method to detect ARC in critically ill patients. Augmented renal clearance is clearly associated with subtherapeutic antimicrobial concentrations and subsequent therapeutic failure. This warrants the need for adjusted dosing regimens to optimize pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic target attainment. This review aims to summarize current knowledge on ARC in critically ill children, to give insight into its possible pathophysiological mechanism, to evaluate screening methods for ARC in the pediatric intensive care population, and to illustrate the effect of ARC on drug exposure, therapeutic efficacy, and clinical outcome.
引用
收藏
页码:25 / 39
页数:15
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