Cefiderocol safe to use in hospitalized children with bacterial infection

05 Feb 2025
Stephen Padilla
Stephen Padilla
Stephen Padilla
Stephen Padilla
Cefiderocol safe to use in hospitalized children with bacterial infection

A 3-hour infusion of cefiderocol in hospitalized paediatric patients is well tolerated and demonstrates activity against clinically relevant Gram-negative species of bacterial infections, reports a phase II study.

“Multiple-dose cefiderocol, administered for 5–14 days and according to body weight, achieved steady-state plasma concentrations that remained above the susceptibility breakpoints of Gram-negative bacteria throughout the dosing period,” the investigators said.

The pharmacokinetics, safety, and tolerability of single- and multiple-dose cefiderocol (as a 3-hour infusion, every 8 hours, dosed at 2,000 mg for body weight ≥34 kg and at 60 mg/kg for body weight <34 kg) were examined in this multicentre, open-label phase II study. Fifty-three paediatric patients with aerobic Gram-negative bacterial infection (median age 73.5. months) were included.

Patients who received multiple-dose cefiderocol required standard-of-care systemic antibiotics for 5–14 days. Participants were then categorized into four cohorts (cohort 1: 12 to <18 years; cohort 2: 6 to <12 years; cohort 3: 2 to <6 years; cohort 4: 3 months to <2 years).

Plasma concentration profiles did not differ significantly with single-dose (n=24) and multiple-dose (n=29) cefiderocol, regardless of age and body weight in those with normal renal function or mild renal impairment. [Pediatr Infec Dis J 2025;44:136-142]

At the end of infusion, the geometric mean concentration ranged between 72.7 and 97.1 μg/mL for single-dose cefiderocol and between 88.8 and 106.0 μg/mL for multiple doses. The corresponding trough concentrations at 8 hours ranged from 7.86 to 10.8 μg/mL with the single dose and from 9.64 to 18.1 μg/mL for multiple doses.

No deaths occurred, and no cefiderocol-related serious adverse events (AEs) were reported. There were also no significant related laboratory abnormalities or discontinuations.

“Cefiderocol was well tolerated in both the single-dose and multiple-dose phases of the study, with infrequent AEs, none of which were related to cefiderocol,” the investigators said. “Thus, cefiderocol could be a valuable treatment option for paediatric patients with multidrug-resistant and carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative bacterial infections.”

Adult studies

In previous studies involving adult patients, cefiderocol exhibited effective lung epithelial lining fluid penetration in parallel with plasma concentrations after a single intravenous dose (2,000 mg) in healthy participants. [Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2017;61:e00700-17]

Additionally, cefiderocol achieved enough lung epithelial lining fluid concentrations to treat Gram-negative pulmonary bacterial infections with a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of ≤4 µg/mL in patients with pneumonia on mechanical ventilation and receiving multiple doses (2 g every 8 hours). [J Antimicrob Chemother 2021;76:2902-2905]

“The pharmacodynamic driver of cefiderocol efficacy is the proportion of the dosing interval spent above the MIC by the unbound antibiotic at the site of infection,” the investigators noted. [Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2017;61:e01022-17]

Cefiderocol, a siderophore-conjugated cephalosporin, works against several aerobic Gram-negative pathogens, including multidrug-resistant organisms. [Infect Dis Ther 2023;12:777-806; Expert Rev Anti Infect Ther 2022;20:1077-1094; Microbiol Spectr 2022;10:e0271221]

Cefiderocol is approved in Europe for the treatment of adults with Gram-negative bacterial infections and in the US for adults with complicated urinary tract infection and pneumonia. However, it is not yet approved for use in children, according to the investigators.