Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: COTRIM versus ZOSYN IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: COTRIM versus ZOSYN IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
COTRIM vs ZOSYN IN PLASTIC CONTAINER
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
COTRIM is a combination of trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole; sulfamethoxazole inhibits dihydropteroate synthase, and trimethoprim inhibits dihydrofolate reductase, sequentially blocking bacterial folate synthesis.
Piperacillin, a ureidopenicillin, inhibits bacterial cell wall synthesis by binding to penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs), inhibiting transpeptidation and autolysin inhibitors. Tazobactam, a beta-lactamase inhibitor, irreversibly inactivates beta-lactamases, preventing hydrolysis of piperacillin.
1 double-strength tablet (160 mg trimethoprim + 800 mg sulfamethoxazole) orally every 12 hours for 5-14 days; 15-20 mg/kg/day (based on trimethoprim) IV divided every 6-8 hours for severe infections.
3.375 g (piperacillin 3 g + tazobactam 0.375 g) intravenously every 6 hours over 30 minutes. For nosocomial pneumonia, 4.5 g every 6 hours.
None Documented
None Documented
Sulfamethoxazole: 9-11 hours (normal renal function); trimethoprim: 8-10 hours. Extended in renal impairment (SMX up to 30h, TMP up to 24h).
Piperacillin: 0.7-1.2 hours (normal renal function). Tazobactam: 0.7-0.9 hours. Clinically, half-life extends to 2-6 hours in renal impairment (CrCl <20 mL/min); requires dose adjustment.
Renal: 50-70% unchanged sulfamethoxazole, 15-30% N4-acetylated metabolite; trimethoprim: 50-60% unchanged, 10-20% metabolites. Biliary/fecal: minimal.
Piperacillin: ~68% renal (glomerular filtration and tubular secretion), 9-17% biliary. Tazobactam: ~80% renal (unchanged and inactive metabolite). Mean cumulative urinary recovery: piperacillin 68%, tazobactam 80%; fecal recovery: piperacillin ~11%, tazobactam <1%.
Category C
Category C
Antibiotic
Antibiotic