Evaluation of the stability of temocillin in elastomeric infusion devices used for outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy in accordance with the requirements of the UK NHS Yellow Cover Document.
Author
Sime, Fekade BruckWallis, Steven
Jamieson, Conor
Hills, Tim
Gilchrist, Mark
Santillo, Mark
Seaton, R Andrew
Drummond, Felicity
Roberts, Jason
Affiliation
University of Queensland; Nottingham University Hospitals; Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust; Sandwell and West Birmingham NHS TrustPublication date
2022-05-24Subject
Pharmacology
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Objective: To evaluate the stability of temocillin solution in two elastomeric infusion devices - Easypump II LT 270-27- S and Dosi-Fusor L25915-250D1 for OPAT administration during 14 days of 5°C±3°C fridge storage followed by 24 hour exposure at an in-use temperature of 32°C, when reconstituted with 0.3% citrate buffer at pH7. Methods: Stability testing was conducted in accordance with standard protocols in the UK National Health Service Yellow Cover Document (YCD). A stability indicating assay method was applied using a high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) system with a photodiode array detector. Low (500 mg/240 mL), intermediate (4000 mg/240 mL) and high (6000 mg/240 mL) temocillin concentrations were tested in triplicate devices with duplicate samples taken at 11 time points during fridge storage and subsequent in-use temperature exposure. Result: The percentage of temocillin remaining after 14 days of fridge storage was greater than 97% in both devices and at all concentrations tested. During subsequent in-use temperature exposure, a 95% stability limit was achieved for 12 hours except for the high concentration (25 mg/mL) in the Dosi-Fusor device. It met this criterion for only 10 hours - the percent of temocillin remaining at 12 hours was 94.5%. However, for all devices and the doses tested, the degradation of temocillin was <9% at the end of 24 hours in-use temperature exposure. Conclusion: Temocillin reconstituted with 0.3% citrate buffer at pH7 in elastomeric infusion devices can be stored in a fridge (2°C-8°C) for 14 days meeting the YCD acceptance criteria. Considering <5% degradation, the current data supports twice daily dosing of temocillin within the OPAT setting. In jurisdictions where a <10% degradation limit is acceptable, once daily dosing with 24-hour continuous infusion may be considered. Temocillin is a useful alternative to other broad-spectrum anti-Gram-negative agents currently utilised in the OPAT setting and supports the wider antimicrobial stewardship agenda.Citation
Sime, F. B., Wallis, S., Jamieson, C., Hills, T., Gilchrist, M., Santillo, M., Seaton, R. A., Drummond, F., Roberts, J., & BSAC Drug Stability Testing Programme (2023). Evaluation of the stability of temocillin in elastomeric infusion devices used for outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy in accordance with the requirements of the UK NHS Yellow Cover Document. European journal of hospital pharmacy : science and practice, 30(e1), e76–e81. https://doi.org/10.1136/ejhpharm-2022-003286Type
ArticlePMID
35609967Publisher
BMJ Publishing Groupae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1136/ejhpharm-2022-003286