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Pharmacotherapy. 2005
Oct;25(10):1310-8.
Pharmacokinetics of intravenously administered levofloxacin in men and
women.
Overholser BR, Kays MB, Lagvankar S, Goldman M, Mueller BA, Sowinski
KM.
1. The Department of Pharmacy Practice, Purdue University School of
Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Indianapolis and West Lafayette,
Indiana; Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of
Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Study Objective. To characterize and compare the pharmacokinetics of
levofloxacin in men and women after systemic administration. Design.
Prospective, open-label, parallel group pharmacokinetic study.
Setting. University research center. Subjects. Eleven healthy men and
nine healthy women stratified by body mass index. Intervention.
Subjects received levofloxacin as a single 500-mg intravenous dose.
Serum and urine were collected over 36 hours. Measurements and Main
Results. Levofloxacin concentrations were determined by
high-performance liquid chromatography with ultraviolet detection.
Pharmacokinetic analysis was performed with ADAPT II software
(University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA). Median (range)
body mass index was 23.2 kg/m(2) (19.9-28.3 kg/m(2)) for men and 23.6
kg/m(2) (16.0-32.4 kg/m(2)) for women (p=0.67). A two-compartment
model best fit the pharmacokinetic data: median (range) R(2) was 0.996
(0.990-0.999). Women had a 24% greater exposure to levofloxacin, with
a significantly smaller steady-state volume of distribution (p<0.01)
and a slower clearance (p<0.01). Conclusions. Differences exist in the
disposition of levofloxacin between healthy men and women after
systemic administration. Fixed intravenous doses of levofloxacin will
lead to greater drug exposure in women. Thus, women may have more of
an increased risk of fluoroquinolone toxicity than men, and men may
need higher doses to achieve similar drug efficacy than women.
Levofloxacin dosage adjustments based on sex should be considered on
an individual basis.
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