Have We Neglected to Study Target-Site Drug Exposure in Children? A Systematic Review of the Literature.

Background and objective

Drug dosing should ideally be based on the drug concentrations at the target site, which, for most drugs, corresponds to the tissue. The exact influence of growth and development on drug tissue distribution is unclear. This systematic review compiles the current knowledge on the tissue distribution of systemically applied drugs in children, with the aim to identify priorities in tissue pharmacokinetic (PK) research in this population.

Methods

A systematic literature search was performed in the MEDLINE and Embase databases.

Results

Forty-two relevant articles were identified, of which 71% investigated antibiotics, while drug classes from the other studies were anticancer drugs, antifungals, anthelmintics, sedatives, thyreostatics, immunomodulators, antiarrhythmics, and exon skipping therapy. The majority of studies (83%) applied tissue biopsy as the sampling technique. Tonsil and/or adenoid tissue was most frequently examined (70% of all included patients). The majority of studies had a small sample size (median 9, range 1-93), did not include the youngest age categories (neonates and infants), and were of low reporting quality. Due to the heterogeneous data from different study compounds, dosing schedules, populations, and target tissues, the possibility for comparison of PK data between studies was limited.

Conclusion

The influence of growth and development on drug tissue distribution continues to be a knowledge gap, due to the paucity of tissue PK data in children, especially in the younger age categories. Future research in this field should be encouraged as techniques to safely investigate drug tissue disposition in children are available.

© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.

Overview publication

TitleHave We Neglected to Study Target-Site Drug Exposure in Children? A Systematic Review of the Literature.
Date2024-04-01
Issue nameClinical pharmacokinetics
Issue numberv63.4:439-468
DOI10.1007/s40262-024-01364-5
PubMed38551787
AuthorsHermans E, Meersschaut J, Van Herteryck I, Devreese M, Walle JV, De Paepe P & De Cock PA
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