R. Díaz-Peña’s research while affiliated with Unidad Médica de Alta Especialidad Hospital de Pediatria Centro Médico Nacional Siglo XXI and other places

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Publications (2)


Amikacin once-daily in febrile neutropenic children
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 1996

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100 Reads

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1 Citation

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M.G. Miranda-Novales

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R. Díaz-Peña

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[...]

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H. Díaz-Ponce

A randomized clinical trial was performed in children with cancer, fever and neutropenia, to evaluate the efficacy of amikacin once daily versus thrice daily dosing plus carbenicillin in both groups. Fifty patients were included, 25 patients in group A who received amikacin once daily and 25 in group B who received amikacin thrice daily. No intergroup differences were observed, i.e., fever diminished in a median of 6 days (2-8 days) vs. 7 days (3-12 days) in groups A and B respectively (p = 0.37); clinical improvement was observed in a median of 6 days (3-10 days) vs 7 days (2-14 days) (p = 0.68). One patient in group A and two in B died. The peak levels of amikacin on the 7th day of treatment were 10-60 and 7-25 μg/mL in groups A and B respectively, and the serum creatinine levels were 0.3-0.7 for group A and 0.2-0.8 mg/dL for group B; none of the patients presented a creatinine above 40% of the basal value. Three patients of group A had amikacin levels higher than 40 μg/mL without increasing the creatinine levels; our observations do not suggest that toxicity is higher. We conclude that the administration of aminoglycoside once daily seems to be as effective as the traditional dosing.

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[Amikacin in single daily doses in children with fever]

January 1996

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11 Reads

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7 Citations

Revista de investigaci�n Cl�nica

A randomized clinical trial was performed in children with cancer, fever and neutropenia, to evaluate the efficacy of amikacin once daily versus thrice daily dosing plus carbenicillin in both groups. Fifty patients were included, 25 patients in group A who received amikacin once daily and 25 in group B who received amikacin thrice daily. No intergroup differences were observed, i.e., fever diminished in a median of 6 days (2-8 days) vs. 7 days (3-12 days) in groups A and B respectively (p = 0.37);clinical improvement was observed in a median of 6 days (3-10 days) vs 7 days (2-14 days) (p = 0.68). One patient in group A and two in B died. The peak levels of amikacin on the 7th day of treatment were 10-60 and 7-25 micrograms/mL in groups A and B respectively, and the serum creatinine levels were 0.3 - 0.7 for group A and 0.2 - 0.8 mg/dL for group B; none of the patients presented a creatinine above 40% of the basal value. Three patients of group A had amikacin levels higher than 40 micrograms/mL without increasing the creatinine levels; our observations do not suggest that toxicity is higher. We conclude that the administration of aminoglycoside once daily seems to be as effective as the traditional dosing.

Citations (1)


... Meta-analysis performed on these studies suggests that OD aminoglycosides are at least as eVective and certainly no more toxic than the conventional TD dosage. 18 At least six published studies have evaluated the eYcacy of OD aminoglycosides in children with febrile neutropenia [19][20][21][22][23][24] (table 1). They all found OD dosing to be as safe and as clinically eVective as TD administration. ...

Reference:

Once daily ceftriaxone and gentamicin for the treatment of febrile neutropenia
[Amikacin in single daily doses in children with fever]
  • Citing Article
  • January 1996

Revista de investigaci�n Cl�nica