Who can administer
May be administered by registered competent doctor or nurse/midwife
Important information
- Restricted antimicrobial: It will ONLY be supplied on the direct recommendation of Microbiology/Infectious Diseases/Haematology team
- Important: The infusion bottle contains an excess of drug - eg patient 50kg, for 60mg/kg dose = 3g. The infusion bottle contains 6g so excess 3g must be removed
- Hydration is very important for this drug - see under dose for details
- For fluid restricted patients, see SPC
Available preparations
Foscavir 6,000mg in 250ml bottle (24mg/ml)
Note: The 12g/500ml solution for infusion is NOT routinely available in GUH
Reconstitution
Already in solution
Dilute further prior to administration (peripheral use)
Infusion fluids
Sodium chloride 0.9% or Glucose 5%
Methods of intravenous administration
Intermittent Intravenous Infusion (administer using an electronically controlled infusion device)
Peripheral line (ref 1,2)
- Gloves, protective eyewear and a mask should be worn by those handling this drug
- The drug solution needs to be diluted to give a 12mg per ml solution. This can be done in one of two ways:
- 1: (PREFERRED method)
- Calculate required dose, and withdraw excess drug from infusion bottle and discard it
- Administer the volume left in the infusion bottle (the required dose) over at least 60 minutes (120 minutes for doses greater than 60mg/kg) while....
- Piggybacking 1000ml sodium chloride 0.9% through the same catheter/cannula as the foscarnet infusion (at the same rate as foscarnet)- this dilutes the injection solution to the required concentration as it is being administered
- 2: (ALTERNATIVE method) (ref 1)
- Dilute required dose with an equal volume of infusion fluid
- Calculate the volume of drug solution required for the dose
- Remove a volume of infusion fluid from a 500ml bag to leave an equal volume to the drug solution in the bag- and add in the foscarnet solution. example: patient dose is 4200mg = 175ml drug solution. Remove 325ml infusion fluid from a 500ml bag (to leave 175ml in bag)- add the 175ml drug solution
- Administer the required dose over at least 60 minutes (120 minutes for doses greater than 60mg/kg)
Central line
- Calculate required dose, and withdraw excess drug from infusion bottle
- Administer undiluted over at least 60 minutes (120 minutes for doses greater than 60mg/kg)
- Hydration also required: 500 to 1000ml
Glass bottle precautions as follows: (ref 3)
- As the drug is supplied in glass bottles, precautions need to be taken during administration to prevent possible air embolism - particularly in central line administration.
- Bottles must be vented in one of two ways
- Directly by means of a filter needle into the bottle which goes through the rubber stopper and opens into the air, or
- Direct air vent on the air inlet of the administration set, located between the drip chamber and piercing pin, it is covered with a bacterial retentive filter to reduce the chance of contamination
Dose in adults
Hydration
- Renal toxicity can be reduced by adequate hydration of the patient
- Hydration is recommended with each infusion to reduce renal toxicity - this is in addition to the dilution of the drug as outlined above
- Hydrate with 500 to 1000ml of Sodium chloride 0.9% at each infusion. In compliant patients, oral hydration with similar hydration regimens has been used. Clinically dehydrated patients should have their condition corrected before initiating foscarnet therapy
CMV disease induction
- Give 60mg/kg every eight hours or 90mg/kg every twelve hours (BNF) for two to three weeks
CMV disease maintenance
- Give 60mg/kg daily (occasionally 90mg/kg has been given as an initial maintenance dose)
- Increase to 90 to 120mg/kg if tolerated and/or progressive retinitis
- If disease progression on maintenance dose, repeat induction dose
Mucocutaneous herpes simplex infections unresponsive to aciclovir in immunocompromised patients
- Give 40mg/kg every eight hours for two to three weeks or until lesions heal
Renal dose adjustments
CMV Induction therapy |
Creatinine clearance (ml/kg/min)(see below for calculations) |
CMV Dose in mg/kg every EIGHT hours |
HSV Dose in mg/kg every EIGHT hours |
greater than 1.6 |
60 |
40 |
1.6 to 1.4 |
55 |
37 |
1.4 to 1.2 |
49 |
33 |
1.2 to 1 |
42 |
28 |
1 to 0.8 |
35 |
24 |
0.8 to 0.6 |
28 |
19 |
0.6 to 0.4 |
21 |
14 |
less than 0.4 |
Treatment not recommended |
CMV Maintenance therapy |
Creatinine clearance (ml/kg/min) (see below for calculations) |
One infusion dose (mg/kg/day) |
greater than 1.6 |
60* |
1.6 to 1.4 |
55 |
1.4 to 1.2 |
49 |
1.2 to 1 |
42 |
1 to 0.8 |
35 |
0.8 to 0.6 |
28 |
0.6 to 0.4 |
21 |
less than 0.4 |
Treatment not recommended |
* a number of patients have received 90mg/kg as a starting dose for maintenance therapy
Creatinine clearance is calculated using the following formula (this gives the answer in ml/kg/min- as per table above)
N * (140-Age in yrs) / Serum creatinine (micromol/l)
Where N is 1.23 for male patients, 1.04 for female patients (This formula may not be accurate for patients at extremes of body weight- ie obese or very underweight)
Monitoring
- Monitor serum creatinine every second day during induction therapy, and once weekly during maintenance therapy
- Adequate hydration must be maintained in all patients
- Monitor serum calcium and magnesium levels
Further information
- Each 250mg bottle contains 1.38g Sodium (equivalent to 69% of the WHO recommended maximum daily intake of 2g)
References
UK SPC 03/11/2020
1: Injectable medicines- downloaded from http://www.medicinescomplete.com/ 27/10/2021
2: Injectable Medicines Administration Guide UCL hospitals, downloaded from Medusa 27/10/2021
3:Glass bottle reference - see below