First, a word on nomenclature:
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You’re not doing a ‘IV to oral stepdown’, because IV isn’t superior to oral (except by way of dosing). You are switching therapy from IV to oral, hence: IV to oral switch.
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Parameter | Oral | Intravenous |
---|---|---|
Bioavailability | Variable | 100% |
Distribution (minutes) | 0.5-2h |
E.g. up to 2h e.g. for Co-trimoxazole, compared to IV. | ~5 mins | | Adherence | Depends on patient | Depends on nurse | | Dosing | Limited by PO absorption / GI tolerability | Higher doses can be given IV (e.g. amoxicillin; up to 20g/d). | | Rx options | Limited by what’s available orally | Many | | Dosing | 1 – 4x daily | 1 – 6x daily | | IV line complications | N/A | Present | | ADRs | Fewer | More | | Expense | £ | £££ | | Carbon / plastic cost | £ | £££ |
Let’s talk about a couple of these:
Absorption: See our page on Bioavailability, but for several drugs this is near equivalent to IV. It’s important to know, however, when it isn’t:
Also: Some antibiotics have absorption limitations (e.g. amoxicillin & cefalexin have maximal absorptions per oral dose (750mg for Amoxicillin, ~1g for Cefalexin).
Distribution: Dose equivalent IV and PO doses will result in different Cmax, but for most antibiotics that shouldn’t matter: For beta-lactams it’s T>MIC that matters, Aminoglycosides/Daptomycin it’s Cmax, and for most other antibiotics it’s AUC/MIC, which is a function of Cmax and half-life (I’m simplifying a bit). The differential time to Cmax administering IV compared to PO is unlikely to result in reduced attainment of PD target.
Financial: IV generally more expensive than PO (Costs from BNF):
Drug \ Daily cost | PO | IV |
---|---|---|
Amoxicillin 500mg TID | £0.21 | £2.88 |
Co-trimoxazole 960mg BD | £0.46 | £18.86 |
Ciprofloxacin 500mg BD | ||
(or 400mg BD for IV) | £0.19 | £43.52 |
Plastic/carbon: See the section on metronidazole oral switching from our episode on the BSAC spring conference for an example; many others are published.
Nursing time: This study compared prep and admin time for antibiotics:
So oral switching is a good idea: when to do it?
The UK HSA has guidance available here; image below also:
My issues with this is that it’s way too conservative:
Infections requiring ‘Special Consideration’:
(admittedly they just say for those infections to have a clearly documented plan or specialist advice, i.e. they want an ID doc involved in these cases - not unreasonable)
This checklist was written by consensus, and incorporated the prejudices of that consensus, i.e. that IV is superior to oral, and that you need to make sure the patient is improving before you move them to an inferior treatment (oral therapy). That has never been true
In defence of this checklist, it does advocate oral switching to be considered “from first dose of IV antimicrobial with formal review completed within 48 hours and daily thereafter, unless clearly documented exemptions.”
For those of you wanting to update IVOS criteria in your own department, my draft IVOS criteria is here: