Clinical pharmacology of moxalactam in patients with malignant disease

Abstract
Pharmacological studies of moxalactam were conducted with 37 cancer patients. Intramuscular administration of 500 mg of moxalactam to 10 patients produced a mean peak serum concentration of 12.4 micrograms/ml. The serum terminal-phase half-life was 3.9 h. Intravenous administration of 500 mg of moxalactam over 5 min to the same 10 patients produced a mean serum concentration of 42.0 micrograms/ml at 15 min, which decreased to 3.3 micrograms/ml at 6 h. A dose of 1 g of moxalactam was given in an identical manner to the same 10 patients. The mean serum concentration was 69.7 micrograms/ml at 15 min and 7.4 micrograms/ml at 6 h. The mean proportions of a drug recovered in the urine by 12 h after administration were 59% after the intramuscular dose and 61 and 55% after the single intravenous doses. Multiple-dose intravenous studies were also conducted. The serum terminal-phase half-life varied from 2.0 to 3.2 h. Continuous infusion studies were performed by up to 9 days by using a loading dose of 1 g over 0.5 h, followed by 2 g every 6 h. Serum concentrations were maintained at about 30.0 micrograms/ml during the study period.