Penicillin: Difference between revisions
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==Background== |
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===Nomenclature=== |
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*Broadly speaking, formulations of penicillin G are soluble and used for IV or IM administration, and penicillin V is used for oral administration but does not achieve high levels in the serum |
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* Directly inhibits [[Penicillin-binding protein|penicillin-binding proteins]] |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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[[Category:Beta-lactams]] |
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!Formulation |
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!Other Names |
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!Comments |
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|- |
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|sodium penicillin G |
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|sodium benzylpenicillin |
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crystalline penicillin |
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|soluble, used for IV |
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|- |
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|procaine penicillin G |
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|procaine benzylpenicillin |
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procaine penicilli |
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|less soluble, used for IM |
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|- |
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|benzathine penicillin G |
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|DBED penicillin |
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|less soluble than procaine, used for IM |
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|- |
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|penicillin V |
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|phenoxymethylpenicillin |
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|used for PO, but poor absorption |
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|} |
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===Mechanism of Action=== |
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*Directly inhibits [[Penicillin-binding protein|penicillin-binding proteins]] |
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===Spectrum of Activity=== |
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*Generally active against Gram-positive cocci, especially [[streptococci]] but some strains of [[Staphylococcus aureus]], most [[clostridia]], [[Neisseria]], and some [[Haemophilus influenzae]] |
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*Not active against aerobic Gram-negative bacilli |
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*Penicillin G is generally more active than penicillin V across all bacteria |
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===Clinical Breakpoints=== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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! rowspan="2" |Species |
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! colspan="3" |Breakpoints (μg/mL) |
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! colspan="3" |Breakpoints (mm) |
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!S |
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!I |
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!R |
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!S |
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!I |
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!R |
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|[[Anaerobes]] except [[Bacteroides]] |
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|≤0.5 |
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|1 |
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|≥2 |
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|[[Enterococcus]] |
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|≤8 |
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|≥16 |
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|≥15 |
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|≤14 |
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|- |
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|[[Neisseria gonorrhoeae]] |
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|≤0.06 |
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|0.12-1 |
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|≥2 |
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|≥47 |
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|27-46 |
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|≤26 |
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|- |
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|[[Neisseria meningitidis]] |
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|≤0.06 |
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|0.12-0.25 |
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|≥0.5 |
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|[[Staphylococcus]] |
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|≤0.12 |
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|≥0.25 |
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|≥29 |
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|≤28 |
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|[[Streptococcus pneumoniae]] |
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|≥20 |
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|[[Streptococcus pneumoniae]] IV (nonmeningitis) |
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|≤2 |
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|4 |
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|≥8 |
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|- |
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|[[Streptococcus pneumoniae]] IV (meningitis) |
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|≤0.06 |
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|≥0.12 |
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|- |
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|[[Streptococcus pneumoniae]] PO (pen V) |
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|≤0.06 |
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|0.12-1 |
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|≥2 |
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|[[Streptococcus]] (β-hemolytic) |
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|≤0.12 |
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|≥24 |
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|- |
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|[[Streptococcus]] (viridans group) |
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|≤0.12 |
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|0.25-2 |
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|≥4 |
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== Dosing == |
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* Benzylpenicillin (penicillin G) |
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** Standard dosing: 3 million units (1.8 g) IV q4h, or 4 million units (2.4 g) IV q6h |
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** High dose (for critical illness, IE, and CNS penetration): 4 million units (2.4 g ) IV q4h |
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=== Renal Dosing === |
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==== Benzylpenicillin (Penicillin G) ==== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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!GFR (mL/min) |
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!Standard Dose |
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!High Dose |
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|- |
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|>50 |
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|3 MU (1.8 g) IV q4h, or 4 MU (2.4 g) IV q6h |
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|4 MU (2.4 g ) IV q4h |
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|- |
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|10-50 |
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|3 MU (1.8 g) IV q6h |
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|3 MU (1.8 g) IV q4h |
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|- |
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|<10 |
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|3 MU (1.8 g) IV load, then 2 MU (1.2 g) IV q8h |
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|4 MU (2.4 g) IV load, then 2 MU (1.2 g ) IV q6h |
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|- |
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|CRRT |
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|2 MU (1.2 g) IV q6h |
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|3 MU (1.8 g) IV q6h |
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|} |
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== Safety == |
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=== Adverse Reactions === |
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==== Hypersensitivity Reactions ==== |
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* Can cause any type of [[hypersensitivity reaction]] (I to IV) |
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* Type I: [[anaphylaxis]] and [[urticaria]] |
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* Type II: [[autoimmune hemolytic anemia]] |
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* Type III: [[serum sickness-like reaction]] |
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* Type IV: |
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** Delayed maculopapular drug rash |
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*** Usually after 7 to 10 days of starting and up to 1 to 3 days after stopping) |
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*** Progresses over days, with lesions that are relatively fixed |
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*** Can worsen over a few days after stopping, then resolves over 1 to 2 weeks |
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*** Pruritis is variable |
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*** Most commonly occur in the context of a viral infection |
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** [[Contact dermatitis]] |
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[[Category:Β-lactams]] |
Latest revision as of 18:44, 30 August 2022
Background
Nomenclature
- Broadly speaking, formulations of penicillin G are soluble and used for IV or IM administration, and penicillin V is used for oral administration but does not achieve high levels in the serum
Formulation | Other Names | Comments |
---|---|---|
sodium penicillin G | sodium benzylpenicillin
crystalline penicillin |
soluble, used for IV |
procaine penicillin G | procaine benzylpenicillin
procaine penicilli |
less soluble, used for IM |
benzathine penicillin G | DBED penicillin | less soluble than procaine, used for IM |
penicillin V | phenoxymethylpenicillin | used for PO, but poor absorption |
Mechanism of Action
- Directly inhibits penicillin-binding proteins
Spectrum of Activity
- Generally active against Gram-positive cocci, especially streptococci but some strains of Staphylococcus aureus, most clostridia, Neisseria, and some Haemophilus influenzae
- Not active against aerobic Gram-negative bacilli
- Penicillin G is generally more active than penicillin V across all bacteria
Clinical Breakpoints
Species | Breakpoints (μg/mL) | Breakpoints (mm) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
S | I | R | S | I | R | |
Anaerobes except Bacteroides | ≤0.5 | 1 | ≥2 | |||
Enterococcus | ≤8 | ≥16 | ≥15 | ≤14 | ||
Neisseria gonorrhoeae | ≤0.06 | 0.12-1 | ≥2 | ≥47 | 27-46 | ≤26 |
Neisseria meningitidis | ≤0.06 | 0.12-0.25 | ≥0.5 | |||
Staphylococcus | ≤0.12 | ≥0.25 | ≥29 | ≤28 | ||
Streptococcus pneumoniae | ≥20 | |||||
Streptococcus pneumoniae IV (nonmeningitis) | ≤2 | 4 | ≥8 | |||
Streptococcus pneumoniae IV (meningitis) | ≤0.06 | ≥0.12 | ||||
Streptococcus pneumoniae PO (pen V) | ≤0.06 | 0.12-1 | ≥2 | |||
Streptococcus (β-hemolytic) | ≤0.12 | ≥24 | ||||
Streptococcus (viridans group) | ≤0.12 | 0.25-2 | ≥4 |
Dosing
- Benzylpenicillin (penicillin G)
- Standard dosing: 3 million units (1.8 g) IV q4h, or 4 million units (2.4 g) IV q6h
- High dose (for critical illness, IE, and CNS penetration): 4 million units (2.4 g ) IV q4h
Renal Dosing
Benzylpenicillin (Penicillin G)
GFR (mL/min) | Standard Dose | High Dose |
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>50 | 3 MU (1.8 g) IV q4h, or 4 MU (2.4 g) IV q6h | 4 MU (2.4 g ) IV q4h |
10-50 | 3 MU (1.8 g) IV q6h | 3 MU (1.8 g) IV q4h |
<10 | 3 MU (1.8 g) IV load, then 2 MU (1.2 g) IV q8h | 4 MU (2.4 g) IV load, then 2 MU (1.2 g ) IV q6h |
CRRT | 2 MU (1.2 g) IV q6h | 3 MU (1.8 g) IV q6h |
Safety
Adverse Reactions
Hypersensitivity Reactions
- Can cause any type of hypersensitivity reaction (I to IV)
- Type I: anaphylaxis and urticaria
- Type II: autoimmune hemolytic anemia
- Type III: serum sickness-like reaction
- Type IV:
- Delayed maculopapular drug rash
- Usually after 7 to 10 days of starting and up to 1 to 3 days after stopping)
- Progresses over days, with lesions that are relatively fixed
- Can worsen over a few days after stopping, then resolves over 1 to 2 weeks
- Pruritis is variable
- Most commonly occur in the context of a viral infection
- Contact dermatitis
- Delayed maculopapular drug rash