Tobramycin Serum Concentrations After Aerosol and Oral Administration in Cystic Fibrosis |
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Authors: | Weber Allan Williams-Warren Judy Ramsey Bonnie Smith Arnold L. |
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Affiliation: | Division of Infectious Diseases, Children's Hospital and Medical Center, and the Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington, Seattle, USA. |
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Abstract: | We sought to describe tobramycin absorption after aerosol administration to cystic fibrosis (CF) subjects. Serum tobramycin concentrations were determined by modification of the radioimmuno-assay (RIA) technique, lowering the limit of detection from 1.0 &mgr;g ml(minus sign1) to 0.05 &mgr;g ml(minus sign1). In 37 studies, after aerosol delivery of 666 plus minus 195 mg to the airway of 24 patients, in which 222 samples were assayed, only 1 serum sample contained tobramycin at a concentration greater than 1.0 &mgr;g ml(minus sign1). Twenty-six of the 37 studies permitted estimation of pharmacokinetic parameters of tobramycin. The serum clearance of tobramycin following aerosol adminstration is 39.13 plus minus 0.393 L h(minus sign1) (mean plus minus standard error of the mean), with an elimination half-life of 3.072 plus minus 0.194 h. The half-life was significantly longer than that found after intravenous adminstration. The elimination rate constant (K(e)) was calculated to be 0.234 plus minus 0.002 h(minus sign1). Estimated total-body clearance in which systemic absorption was determined from sputum and urinary recovery of tobramycin was 0.094 plus minus 0.002 1 hr(minus sign1) kg(minus sign1). We also studied tobramycin absorption in six CF subjects after ingestion of a 80-mg m(minus sign2) dose, to gain insight into the tobramycin levels observed after swallowing an aerosol. Four out of the six subjects had measurable serum tobramycin concentration after ingestion. The serum concentration-time curve mirrored what was seen after aerosol administration. We concluded that tobramycin has poor systemic absorption in CF subjects after aerosol administration. Tobramycin in serum after aerosol administration is in part due to the gastrointestinal absorption of swallowed drug, as well as absorption from lower respiratory tract. |
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