Cefminox

General

  • Type: 2nd generation Cephalosporin (Cephamycin)
  • Dosage Forms: powder for injection
  • Dosage Strengths: 500mg, 1g
  • Routes of Administration: IV, IM
  • Common Trade Names: Meicelin

Adult Dosing

General

  • Mild-Moderate: 1g IM/IV q12h
  • Severe: 2-3g IM/IV divided q8-12h
  • Life Threatening (Sepsis, Peritonitis): Up to 6g/day IM/IV divided q6-8h
  • Max: 6g/day

UTI, Complicated/Uncomplicated

  • 1g IM/IV q12h

Intra-abdominal Infections (Peritonitis, Cholecystitis)

  • 2g IM/IV q12h or 1g q8h

Respiratory Tract Infections

  • 1g IM/IV q12h

Pediatric Dosing

General

  • Mild-Moderate: 40-80mg/kg/day IM/IV divided q6-8h
  • Severe/Sepsis: Up to 160mg/kg/day IM/IV divided q6-8h
  • Max: 6g/day (should not exceed adult dose)

Special Populations

  • Pregnancy: B
  • Lactation: Excreted in breast milk; use with caution
  • Renal
    • Adult
      • CrCl 30-60: give usual dose q12-24h
      • CrCl 10-29: give usual dose q24h
      • CrCl <10: give usual dose q24-48h
      • Hemodialysis: Give dose after dialysis
      • Peritoneal dialysis: Supplement not usually required
    • Pediatric
      • Renal dosing not well defined; adjust based on adult ratios
  • Hepatic
    • Monitor coagulation parameters (PT/INR) due to risk of hypoprothrombinemia

Contraindications

  • Allergy to class/drug (Cephalosporins, Cephamycins)
  • History of anaphylaxis to Penicillins
  • Concurrent alcohol ingestion (Disulfiram-like reaction)

Adverse Reactions

Serious

Common

Pharmacology

  • Half-life: ~2.5h (Prolonged in renal impairment)
  • Metabolism: Not significantly metabolized (Excreted unchanged)
  • Excretion: Urine (~90%)
  • Mechanism of Action: Bactericidal; inhibits cell wall mucopeptide synthesis; binds to PBPs

Antibiotic Sensitivities[1]

Group Organism Sensitivity
Gram Positive Strep. Group A, B, C, G S
Strep. Pneumoniae S
Viridans strep S
Strep. anginosus gp X1
Enterococcus faecalis R
Enterococcus faecium R
MSSA S
MRSA R
CA-MRSA R
Staph. Epidermidis I
C. jeikeium R
L. monocytogenes R
Gram Negatives N. gonorrhoeae S
N. meningitidis S
Moraxella catarrhalis S
H. influenzae S
E. coli S
Klebsiella sp S
E. coli/Klebsiella ESBL+ X1
E coli/Klebsiella KPC+ R
Enterobacter sp, AmpC neg I
Enterobacter sp, AmpC pos R
Serratia sp I
Serratia marcescens R
Salmonella sp S
Shigella sp S
Proteus mirabilis S
Proteus vulgaris S
Providencia sp. R
Morganella sp. R
Citrobacter freundii R
Citrobacter diversus I
Citrobacter sp. I
Aeromonas sp I
Acinetobacter sp. R
Pseudomonas aeruginosa R
Burkholderia cepacia R
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia R
Yersinia enterocolitica R
Francisella tularensis X1
Brucella sp. X1
Legionella sp. R
Pasteurella multocida X1
Haemophilus ducreyi X1
Vibrio vulnificus X1
Misc Chlamydophila sp X1
Mycoplasm pneumoniae X1
Rickettsia sp X1
Mycobacterium avium X1
Anaerobes Actinomyces X1
Bacteroides fragilis S
Prevotella melaninogenica S
Clostridium difficile X1
Clostridium (not difficile) S
Fusobacterium necrophorum S
Peptostreptococcus sp. S

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

  1. Sanford Guide to Antimicrobial Therapy