Predictors of target initial teicoplanin trough concentration attainment in patients with hematological malignancies: a retrospective cohort study
Kazuki Deguchi, Norihiro Sakurai, Toya Matsui, Mayuko Itoya, Makoto Miyoshi, Hiroshi Kawaguchi, Yasutaka Nakamura

TL;DR
This study identifies factors that predict whether patients with blood cancers achieve effective teicoplanin drug levels after initial treatment.
Contribution
The study identifies specific clinical and treatment-related predictors of teicoplanin trough concentration attainment in hematological malignancy patients.
Findings
51% of patients achieved target teicoplanin trough concentrations after loading doses.
Febrile neutropenia, bone marrow transplantation, tacrolimus coadministration, and cumulative teicoplanin dose are independent predictors of target attainment.
Patients with multiple risk factors had a 22% attainment rate when receiving lower teicoplanin doses.
Abstract
Teicoplanin (TEIC) is frequently used at Osaka Metropolitan University Hospital to treat infections caused by gram-positive cocci in patients with hematological malignancies. However, in certain cases, the initial trough concentrations failed to reach the target level, despite appropriate loading doses. Therefore, this study aimed to identify the factors associated with achieving target concentrations based on the initial trough level following TEIC loading in patients with hematological malignancies. We retrospectively analyzed patients with hematological malignancies treated with TEIC between January 2016 and December 2022. Patients were classified into a target trough attainment group (trough ≥ 15 µg/mL) and a non-attainment group (trough < 15 µg/mL) according to the initial trough concentration measured on day 4 after administering the loading doses. Demographics, clinical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlood disorders and treatments · Neutropenia and Cancer Infections · Antimicrobial Resistance in Staphylococcus
