Background
Spectrum of Activity
Mechanism of Action
Acts as a pyrophosphate analogue that competitively and reversibly inhibits herpesvirus DNA polymerase, causing premature chain termination of DNA
Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics
CSF penetration 66% of serum levels
Dosing
Pediatric Dosing
Induction: foscarnet 60 mg/kg IV q8h or 90 mg/kg IV q12h
Maintenance: foscarnet 90 to 120 mg/kg IV q24h
Administration
Infusion rate not to exceed 1 mg/kg/min, with adult doses of 60 mg/kg typically infused over 1 hour, and doses of 90 to 120 mg/kg infused over 2 hours
Safety
Adverse Events
Most common AEs include infusion-related nausea , electrolyte abnormalities, and acute kidney injury
Renal tubular nephrotoxicity is common, dose-dependent, and usually reversible if drug is stopped early
Crystal glomerular nephropathy also occurs
Electrolyte abnormalities, including hypocalcemia , hypophosphatemia , hyperphosphatemia , hypomagnesemia , and hypokalemia
Nausea is very common, and can be debilitating
Minimize with concurrent IV and oral hydration, antiemetics, and slowing the infusion rate1
Other AEs include:
Monitoring
Close monitoring of electrolytes and creatinine is required