Weight-Based Dose Calculator
Calculate medication doses based on patient weight using mg/kg dosing. Supports custom dose inputs and common drug presets.
Eingaben
Disclaimer: For educational purposes only. Always verify doses with your institution's formulary and pharmacy. Not a substitute for clinical judgment.
Über dieses Tool
What Is Weight-Based Dosing?
Weight-based dosing (mg/kg dosing) adjusts medication doses proportionally to a patient's body weight. This approach accounts for differences in drug distribution volume and metabolism across body sizes. It is the standard method for pediatric dosing and is used for many adult medications including antibiotics (vancomycin, aminoglycosides), anticoagulants (heparin, enoxaparin), and emergency medications.
How to Calculate
The formula is straightforward: Total Dose = Weight (kg) × Dose per kg. For example, a 70 kg patient receiving amoxicillin at 25 mg/kg would get 1,750 mg per dose. When a frequency is specified, the daily total is calculated as the single dose multiplied by the number of daily doses.
Which Weight to Use?
Most drugs are dosed on actual body weight (ABW). However, certain medications require ideal body weight (IBW) or adjusted body weight (AdjBW) for accurate dosing — particularly in obese patients. Aminoglycosides typically use AdjBW (IBW + 0.4 × [ABW − IBW]), while vancomycin generally uses ABW. Always consult drug-specific guidelines.
🔑 Klinische Hinweise
- Always check maximum dose caps — a 150 kg patient dosed at 15 mg/kg acetaminophen = 2,250 mg, exceeding the 1,000 mg single dose max.
- Convert pounds to kilograms accurately: 1 lb = 0.4536 kg. A 10% error in weight = 10% error in dose.
- For obese patients, consider whether the drug is lipophilic (use ABW) or hydrophilic (use IBW/AdjBW).
- Pediatric doses should always be double-checked against both mg/kg and maximum adult doses.
Wichtige Referenzen
- Bauer LA. Applied Clinical Pharmacokinetics. 3rd ed. McGraw-Hill, 2015.
- Taketomo CK, et al. Pediatric & Neonatal Dosage Handbook. Lexicomp, 2023.
Formel zuletzt überprüft: Februar 2026