TB Research

Population pharmacokinetics and target attainment analysis of linezolid in multidrug‐resistant tuberculosis patients

Anna Katharina Tietjen, Niklas Kroemer, Dario Cattaneo, Sara Baldelli, Sebastian G. Wicha

British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology · 2021-10

Abstract

AIM: This study investigates the pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) target attainment of linezolid in patients infected with multidrug-resistant (MDR) tuberculosis (TB). METHODS: A pharmacometric model was developed including 244 timed linezolid concentration samples from 39 patients employing NONMEM 7.4. The probability of target attainment (PTA, PK/PD target: unbound (f) area-under-the-concentration-time-curve (AUC)/minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 119) as well as a region-specific cumulative fraction of response (CFR) were estimated for different dosing regimens. RESULTS: (interoccasion variability 143.7%) allometric scaled by weight best described the PK of linezolid. The PTA at an MIC of 0.5 mg/L was 55% or 97% if patients receiving 300 or 600 mg twice daily, respectively. CFRs varied greatly among populations and geographic regions. A desirable global CFR of ≥90% was achieved if linezolid was administered at a dose of 600 mg twice daily but not at a dose of 300 mg twice daily. CONCLUSION: This study showed that a dose of 300 mg twice daily of linezolid might not be sufficient to treat MDR-TB patients from a PK/PD perspective. Thus, it might be recommendable to start with a higher dose of 600 mg twice daily to ensure PK/PD target attainment. Hereby, therapeutic drug monitoring and MIC determination should be performed to control PK/PD target attainment as linezolid shows high variability in its PK in the TB population.

MeSH terms

  • Linezolid
  • Pharmacokinetics
  • NONMEM
  • Medicine
  • Pharmacology
  • Dosing
  • Population
  • Minimum inhibitory concentration
  • Volume of distribution
  • Therapeutic drug monitoring
  • Pharmacodynamics
  • Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis
  • Area under the curve
  • Tuberculosis
  • Antibiotics
  • Internal medicine