A Comparison of the Accuracy of a Least Squares Regression, a Bayesian, Chiou’s and the Steady-State Clearance Method of Individualising Theophylline Dosage

SummaryWe compared a least squares regression method, used prospectively to individualise the intravenous aminophylline and oral theophylline dosage of 48 patients, with 3 other pharmacokinetic methods — Chiou’s, the steady-state clearance and the Bayesian — used retrospectively to analyse the same patient data. Methods were compared on the basis of the similarity of their parameter estimates and the accuracy with which serum concentrations during subsequent intravenous and oral therapy could be forecast, assuming each method’s parameter estimates.The least squares and Bayesian programs were able to fit data from all but 4 and 2 patients, respectively. Mean absolute prediction errors were of the order of 20% for serum concentrations during intravenous therapy, and of the order of 40% for serum concentrations during oral therapy. The accuracy of the least squares, Bayesian and steady-state clearance methods were similar, but the accuracy of Chiou’s method was comparable only when the 2 serum concentrations needed for the method were measured between 11 and 17 hours apart; an interval which corresponds to the 1.0 to 1.5 half-lives previously suggested as desirable for implementation of the Chiou method.

[1]  J. Mh,et al.  Evaluation of the Chiou method for determining theophylline dosages. , 1984 .

[2]  B. Franklin,et al.  Theophylline disposition in obesity , 1978, Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics.

[3]  A L Smith,et al.  Hypothesis for the Individualisation of Drug Dosage , 1979, Clinical pharmacokinetics.

[4]  J. McNeil,et al.  A randomized controlled clinical trial of pharmacokinetic theophylline dosing. , 1986, The American review of respiratory disease.

[5]  L. Hendeles,et al.  The relation of product formulation to absorption of oral theophylline. , 1978, The New England journal of medicine.

[6]  Lewis B. Sheiner,et al.  A Microcomputer Drug (Theophylline) Dosing Program Which Assists and Teaches Physicians , 1980 .

[7]  L. Sheiner,et al.  Changes in theophylline clearance during acute illness. , 1978, JAMA.

[8]  J J Schentag,et al.  System for clinical pharmacokinetic monitoring of theophylline therapy. , 1976, American journal of hospital pharmacy.

[9]  R. Ogilvie Clinical Pharmacokinetics of Theophylline , 1978, Clinical pharmacokinetics.

[10]  L. Lesko,et al.  Dose-dependent Elimination Kinetics of Theophylline , 1979, Clinical pharmacokinetics.

[11]  N. Benowitz,et al.  Cigarette abstinence, nicotine gum, and theophylline disposition. , 1987, Annals of internal medicine.

[12]  L. Hendeles,et al.  Monitoring Serum Theophylline Levels , 1978, Clinical pharmacokinetics.

[13]  J G Weg,et al.  Reliability of theophylline clearance in determining chronic oral dosage regimens. , 1979, American journal of hospital pharmacy.

[14]  M. Zell,et al.  Accuracy of 11 methods for predicting theophylline dose. , 1986, Clinical pharmacy.

[15]  L B Sheiner,et al.  Forecasting individual pharmacokinetics , 1979, Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics.

[16]  D. Taylor,et al.  Prediction of optimum oral theophylline dose in patients with obstructive airways disease. , 1983, British journal of clinical pharmacology.

[17]  J. Raymond,et al.  Use of a pharmacokinetic method for establishing doses of aminophylline to treat acute bronchospasm. , 1981, American journal of hospital pharmacy.