Patients with Obesity Should be Recognised as a Special Patient Population During Drug Development of Antibacterial and Antifungal Agents; A Call to Action

AbstractIndividuals with obesity are at increased risk of developing infectious diseases. Timely administration of an effective dose of an antimicrobial agent is paramount to safeguard optimal therapy. For this purpose, special patient populations at risk for altered exposure such as renal or hepatic impairment are studied during drug development. Strikingly, there is no such evaluation in individuals with obesity despite a potential influence on exposure and a global obesity prevalence of 13 %. Optimal clinical decision making in patients with obesity is impossible without prior study of the drug of interest in this population. This statement is strengthened by an evaluation of 19 antimicrobial agents that showed tremendous variability in the influence of weight on clearance. In contrast to patient with renal or hepatic impairment who are mainly at risk of overexposure, individuals with obesity can be at risk of both under- and overexposure. Gaining knowledge on the influence of body weight on clearance during early phases of drug development may allow for optimisation of other phases of research, potentially increasing success rate of the drug, and can provide clinicians with vital information as soon as the drug reaches the market. Antimicrobial therapy should be tailored to obesity-related (patho)physiological changes and to reach this goal, obese individuals should be studied during drug development.
Source: Clinical Pharmacokinetics - Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: research