ABSTRACT
We assessed the cephalosporin concentration-time curve area (AUC), peak concentration, maintained concentration and duration of exposure on in-vitro bactericidal effects on Escherichia coli NCTC 10418, using exposures modelling cephazolin clinical profiles after 1 g and 2 g i.m. injection, equal AUC exposures (288 mg x h/L, 576 mg x h/L; 48 h) and constant exposures to 6, 12 and 24 mg/L. Cephalosporin dosage exposures based on maintenance of concentrations at multiples (6-24 times) of the MIC were not as effective in early or sustained (24 h) bactericidal effect as exposures modelling im injection profiles with equal or lower AUC (P<0.05, ANOVA). Similar results applied to i.m. comparisons with equal AUC exposures modelling extremes of concentration and time exposures. These results indicate a need for intermittent dosage to produce optimally effective profiles, and raise the possibility that these optimum dosing profiles may allow an extension of minimum interdose intervals beyond 8 h.