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Title

Treatment implications of augmented renal clearance in a critically ill COVID‐19 patient: A case report.

Authors

Deenen, Susan; Fransen, Laura F. C.; Jaspers, Tessa C. C.; Workum, Jessica D.

Abstract

Augmented renal clearance (ARC) is a pathophysiological phenomenon that can occur in critically ill patients, leading to enhanced renal function. It is defined as a creatinine clearance of >130 mL/min/1.73 m2. ARC can lead to subtherapeutic levels of renally cleared drugs and subsequent treatment failure. In COVID‐19, it has only been described in the literature in a few cases. We present the case of a 38‐year‐old critically ill patient with COVID‐19 who developed ARC with an initial clearance of 226 mL/min/1.73 m2, persisting for 30 days. He required high doses of sedatives and neuromuscular blocking agents, as well as increased doses of vancomycin and dalteparin, to reach adequate serum levels. This case emphasizes the importance for clinicians to consider ARC in the dosing of all renally cleared drugs, including antibiotics, low molecular weight heparins, and sedatives, to prevent subtherapeutic drug levels and treatment failure.

Subjects

CRITICALLY ill; COVID-19 pandemic; COVID-19; NEUROMUSCULAR blocking agents; TREATMENT failure; HEPARIN; ENOXAPARIN

Publication

Fundamental & Clinical Pharmacology, 2023, Vol 37, Issue 5, p1011

ISSN

0767-3981

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1111/fcp.12916

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