Cefonicid
General
- Type: 2nd generation Cephalosporin
- Dosage Forms: powder for injection
- Dosage Strengths: 500mg, 1g, 10g
- Routes of Administration: IV, IM
- Common Trade Names: Monocid
Adult Dosing
General
- Uncomplicated: 1g IM/IV q24h
- Severe/Complicated: 2g IM/IV q24h
- Max: 2g/day
UTI, Uncomplicated
- 500mg IM/IV q24h
Pneumonia / LRTI
- 1g IM/IV q24h
Surgical Prophylaxis
- 1g IM/IV x1 (60 min before procedure)
- Cesarean Section: 1g IV after umbilical cord is clamped
Pediatric Dosing
General (>1 Year)
- 20-50mg/kg/day IM/IV given once daily (q24h)
- Max: 2g/day (should not exceed adult dose)
Special Populations
- Pregnancy: B
- Lactation: Excreted in breast milk; use with caution
- Renal
- Adult (Initial dose: 7.5mg/kg IM/IV)
- CrCl 60-79: 10-25mg/kg q24h
- CrCl 40-59: 8-20mg/kg q24h
- CrCl 20-39: 4-15mg/kg q24h
- CrCl 10-19: 4-15mg/kg q48h
- CrCl 5-9: 4-15mg/kg q3-5 days
- CrCl <5: 3-4mg/kg q3-5 days
- Hemodialysis: Give dose after dialysis
- Pediatric
- Renal dosing not well defined; generally avoid or strictly adjust based on adult guidelines
- Adult (Initial dose: 7.5mg/kg IM/IV)
- Hepatic
- Not defined
Contraindications
- Allergy to class/drug (Cephalosporin)
- Immediate hypersensitivity to Penicillins
Adverse Reactions
Serious
- Anaphylaxis
- Stevens-Johnson Syndrome
- Clostridium difficile associated diarrhea
- Neutropenia
- Thrombocytopenia
- Seizures
- Nephrotoxicity (rare)
Common
- Injection site pain (IM)
- Phlebitis
- Diarrhea
- Rash
- Nausea and Vomiting
- Transaminitis
- Eosinophilia
- Increased BUN/Creatinine
Pharmacology
- Half-life: 3.5 - 4.5h (Allows for once-daily dosing)
- Metabolism: Not metabolized
- Excretion: Urine (99% unchanged)
- Mechanism of Action: Bactericidal; inhibits cell wall mucopeptide synthesis
Antibiotic Sensitivities[1]
Key
- S susceptible/sensitive (usually)
- I intermediate (variably susceptible/resistant)
- R resistant (or not effective clinically)
- S+ synergistic with cell wall antibiotics
- U sensitive for UTI only (non systemic infection)
- X1 no data
- X2 active in vitro, but not used clinically
- X3 active in vitro, but not clinically effective for Group A strep pharyngitis or infections due to E. faecalis
- X4 active in vitro, but not clinically effective for strep pneumonia
See Also
References
- ↑ Sanford Guide to Antimicrobial Therapy
