
Pharmacology and Efficacy of Netilmicin
Author(s) -
Irwin Trestman,
James L. Parsons,
Jerome Santoro,
Glenn L. Goodhart,
Donald Kaye
Publication year - 1978
Publication title -
antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.07
H-Index - 259
eISSN - 1070-6283
pISSN - 0066-4804
DOI - 10.1128/aac.13.5.832
Subject(s) - netilmicin , medicine , nephrotoxicity , proteus mirabilis , renal function , proteus , intramuscular injection , creatinine , gastroenterology , antibiotics , gentamicin , pseudomonas aeruginosa , microbiology and biotechnology , kidney , biology , escherichia coli , bacteria , tobramycin , biochemistry , genetics , gene
Twenty-six patients, 20 to 77 years of age, were treated with netilmicin, mean dose 2 mg/kg every 8 h intramuscularly or in a 20-min intravenous infusion. The mean serum half-lives in patients with creatinine clearances of ≥90 ml/min and 60 to 90 ml/min were 3.2 and 3.4 h, respectively. In patients with serum creatinines of ≤1.4 mg/100 ml and creatinine clearances of ≥60 ml/min, mean serum levels were 9.0 and 1.2 μg/ml, respectively, 5 to 15 min and 7.5 h post-intravenous infusion, and 7.1 and 1.7 μg/ml, respectively, 1 and 8 h post-intramuscular injection. Twenty-five patients had acute pyelonephritis; 7 of the 25 had bacteremia. The infecting bacteria wereEscherichia coli (15),Proteus mirabilis (5),Pseudomonas aeruginosa (2),Klebsiella pneumoniae (1),Enterobacter hafniae (1), and bothProteus rettgeri andProteus morganii (1). All were inhibited by 6.3 μg of netilmicin per ml, except for theP. rettgeri , which required 25 μg/ml for inhibition. Of 23 patients who could be evaluated, 19 were bacteriologically and clinically cured at follow-up. Of the remaining four, one relapsed, two became reinfected, and one was lost to follow-up. Five patients developed nephrotoxicity; two of the five had previous renal insufficiency. Three patients, one with abnormal renal function, developed ototoxicity detected only with audiograms. These studies suggest that netilmicin is effective in serious gram-negative bacillary infections, but is nephrotoxic and ototoxic in humans.