Association of Fluconazole Area under the Concentration-Time Curve/MIC and Dose/MIC Ratios with Mortality in Nonneutropenic Patients with Candidemia

Author:

Pai Manjunath P.1,Turpin Robin S.23,Garey Kevin W.4

Affiliation:

1. University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico

2. Merck & Co., West Point, Pennsylvania

3. Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

4. University of Houston, Houston, Texas

Abstract

ABSTRACT The present study tested in vitro susceptibility of Candida bloodstream isolates to fluconazole to determine if the ratio of the fluconazole area under the concentration-time curve (AUC) or weight-normalized daily dose (dose wn ) to MIC correlated with mortality. Fluconazole susceptibility and outcome data were determined for 77 patients with a positive Candida blood culture between 2002 and 2005. The most commonly isolated Candida species were C. albicans (64%), C. glabrata (14%), C. parapsilosis (8%), C. tropicalis (6%), and C. lusitaniae (4%). Only two isolates were classified as fluconazole resistant by the CLSI M27-A2 method. Fluconazole MICs were highest against C. glabrata relative to other Candida species. Overall the crude mortality assessed at hospital discharge was 19.4% ( n = 15). Mortality rates by species were as follows: C. albicans , 16.3%; C. glabrata , 36.4%; C. parapsilosis , 0%; C. tropicalis , 0%; C. lusitaniae , 33.3%. A mortality rate of 50% was noted among patients infected with nonsusceptible isolates (MIC ≥ 16 μg/ml) compared to 18% for patients infected with susceptible (MIC ≤ 8 μg/ml) isolates ( P = 0.17). The fluconazole dose wn /MIC (24-h) values were significantly higher for the 62 survivors (13.3 ± 10.5 [mean ± standard deviation]) compared to the 15 nonsurvivors (7.0 ± 8.0) ( P = 0.03). The fluconazole AUC/MIC (24 h) values also trended higher for survivors (775 ± 739) compared to nonsurvivors (589 ± 715) ( P = 0.09). These data support the dose-dependent properties of fluconazole. Underdosing fluconazole against less-susceptible Candida isolates has the potential to increase the risk of mortality associated with candidemia.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology

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