International Journal of General Medicine (Oct 2022)
Vancomycin Loading Doses and Nephrotoxicity on Medicine Teaching Services
Abstract
Phillip Wagner,1,2 Jonathan Arnold,1 Kathleen Sheridan3 1Department of Internal Medicine, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA, USA; 2Department of Internal Medicine, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD, USA; 3Department of Infectious Diseases, Pittsburgh Infectious Diseases, Pittsburgh, PA, USACorrespondence: Phillip Wagner, Johns Hopkins Hospital, 600 North Wolfe Street, Meyer 8, Room 134A, Baltimore, MD, 21287, USA, Tel +1-412-841-8522, Email [email protected] Correspondence: Kathleen Sheridan, Pittsburgh Infectious Disease, Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 101 Drake Street, Pittsburgh, PA, 15241, USA, Tel +1 412-347-0057, Email [email protected]: Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) guidelines recommend the usage of a loading dose when using vancomycin for seriously ill patients. While the relationship between vancomycin and nephrotoxicity is the focus of many studies, few studies have examined the relationship between vancomycin loading doses and nephrotoxicity.Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study examining vancomycin dosing for internal medicine teaching services’ patients over the 2014– 15 academic year at one academic medical center. We generated a list of all hospitalized patients aged 18– 85 who received vancomycin and were admitted to a teaching service. Nephrotoxicity was determined by 7-day acute kidney injury (AKI) rate. Patients in the loading dose cohort were compared with those in the standard-dose cohort. Primary modeling used multivariable logistic regression with AKI as our outcome of interest.Results: Four hundred and thirty-eight patients were included for analysis. The loading dose (n = 365, 83%) and standard dosing (n = 73, 17%) cohorts were not significantly different regarding demographics, GFR, nephrotoxic drug exposure, total vancomycin received, trough levels, or comorbidities and were only significantly different regarding body mass index (BMI). The 7-day AKI rate was not significantly different between the two arms (6.3% in the standard dosing arm and 8.2% in the loading dose arm, p = 0.6).Conclusion: Few studies have examined the relationship between nephrotoxicity and vancomycin loading doses. The results of this study provide evidence that the use of loading doses is not significantly associated with increased 7-day AKI rate.Keywords: vancomycin, loading dose, nephrotoxicity