Sunday, September 29, 2013

Get Gentamicin Trough Levels Before Administering The Next Dose In HIE With Therapeutic Hypothermia

http://www.jpeds.com/article/S0022-3476(13)00725-7/abstract

Study design

Data were collected prospectively in a regional center providing therapeutic hypothermia. Cooled infants at ≥36 weeks gestation with moderate or severe neonatal encephalopathy were analyzed if a full dataset was available (n = 108), including clinical variables and gentamicin trough levels. Infants with hearing impairment were identified, and survivors were followed up with neurodevelopmental evaluation at age 18 months. Stepwise logistic regression identified factors associated with hearing impairment.

Results

Nine infants died, and among the survivors, 10.1% developed a permanent hearing impairment. The trough gentamicin level was above the recommended cutoff of 2 mg/L in 37% of the infants in the entire cohort and in 90% of the infants with hearing impairment. Logistic regression analysis identified high trough gentamicin level, low cord pH, and hypoglycemia in the first postnatal hour as significantly associated with hearing impairment. The need for inotropic support was close to significant (P = .055).

Conclusion

Hearing impairment was a common finding among cooled infants. Plasma gentamicin levels were commonly >2 mg/L. Based on these findings, we propose changes in gentamicin dosing interval and trough level monitoring to minimize the risk of potentially toxic levels in cooled newborns.

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