Antibiotic prophylaxis in cardiac surgery: a prospective comparison of two dosage regimens of teicoplanin with a combination of flucloxacillin and tobramycin

Abstract
In this study, the pharmacokinetics of teicoplanin have been studied in serum, fat and bone during and after cardiac surgery with two dose (400 and 200 mg) and three dose (400 mg each) regimens in a total of 49 patients. For comparison, 20 other patients, who had received a regimen of flucloxacillin (500 mg qds for five days) and tobramycin (l·5mg/kg initially then 80 mg tds for three days), were similarly investigated. The lowest mean serum level of teicoplanin during operation was 6·9 mg/l in the two dose regimen and 9·7 mg/l with the three dose regimen. Mean serum levels of flucloxacillin and tobramycin fell to 7 and 1·4 mg/l respectively by the end of operation. At the end of bypass, fat washings contained a mean of 1·2 mg/l of teicoplanin and bone washings a mean of 6·3 mg/l. Mean tobramycin levels were 0·4 and 0·9 mg/l respectively and flucloxacillin <1 mg/l in washings from both tissues. The low levels of teicoplanin in fat may explain an excess of Gram-positive sternal infections in the accompanying clinical trial.