Bioanalysis Vol. 16 No. 16 | Research Article

Can capillary microsampling facilitate a clinical pharmacokinetics study of cefazolin in critically ill children?

Summary

Aim: Pharmacokinetic studies in children are limited, in part due to challenges in blood sampling. We compare the use of capillary microsampling and conventional sampling techniques in pediatric patients to show results that can be used in the pharmacokinetic analysis of Cefazolin. Patients & Methods: Paired blood samples (n = 48) were collected from 12 patients (median age/weight 49 months/18 kg). Results: The United States Federal Drug Administration incurred sample reanalysis acceptance criteria was used and identified 79% of paired samples achieved a difference of less than 20% in magnitude with a capillary microsampling bias of –10% (SD 20%). With exclusion of PK outliers, this rose to 88%. Conclusion: Capillary microsampling is reliable, meets acceptance criteria and can be used in pharmacokinetic studies.

ACTRN: 12618001469202.

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