In Vivo Pharmacodynamic Activity of the Glycopeptide Dalbavancin

Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
2007.0

Abstract

Dalbavancin is a lipoglycopeptide antibiotic with broad-spectrum activity against gram-positive cocci and a markedly prolonged serum elimination half-life. We used the neutropenic murine thigh and lung infection models to characterize the pharmacodynamics of dalbavancin. Single-dose pharmacokinetic studies demonstrated linear kinetics and a prolonged elimination half-life which ranged from 7.6 to 13.1 h over the dose range of 2.5 to 80 mg/kg of body weight. The level of protein binding in mouse serum was 98.4%. The time course of in vivo activity of dalbavancin over the same dose range was examined in neutropenic ICR Swiss mice infected with a strain of either Streptococcus pneumoniae or Staphylococcus aureus by using the thigh infection model. The burden of organisms for S. pneumoniae was markedly reduced over the initial 24 h of study, and organism regrowth was suppressed in a dose-dependent fashion for up to the entire 96 h of study following dalbavancin doses of 2.5 mg/kg or greater. Dalbavancin doses of 20 mg/kg or greater resulted in less killing of S. aureus but were still followed by a prolonged suppression of regrowth. Multiple-dosing-regimen studies with the same organisms were used to determined which of the pharmacodynamic indices (maximum concentration in serum [C(max)]/MIC, area under the concentration-versus-time curve [AUC]/MIC, or the duration of time that levels in serum exceed the MIC) best correlated with treatment efficacy. These studies used a dose range of 3.8 to 480 mg/kg/6 days fractionated into 2, 4, 6, or 12 doses over the 144-h dosing period. Nonlinear regression analysis was used to examine the data fit with each pharmacodynamic index. Dalbavancin administration by the use of large, widely spaced doses was the most efficacious for both organisms. Both the 24-h AUC/MIC and the C(max)/MIC parameters correlated well with the in vivo efficacy of treatment against S. pneumoniae and S. aureus (for 24-h AUC/MIC, R(2) = 78 and 77%, respectively; for C(max)/MIC, R(2) = 90 and 57%, respectively). The free-drug 24-h AUC/MICs required for a bacteriostatic effect were 17 +/- 7 for five S. pneumoniae isolates. A similar treatment endpoint for the treatment against five strains of S. aureus required a larger dalbavancin exposure, with a mean free-drug 24-h AUC/MIC of 265 +/- 143. Beta-lactam resistance did not affect the pharmacodynamic target. The dose-response curves were relatively steep for both species; thus, the pharmacodynamic target needed to achieve organism reductions of 1 or 2 log(10) in the mice were not appreciably larger (1.3- to 1.6-fold). Treatment was similarly efficacious in neutropenic mice and in the lung infection model. The dose-dependent efficacy and prolonged elimination half-life of dalbavancin support the widely spaced regimens used in clinical trials. The free-drug 24-h AUC/MIC targets identified in these studies should be helpful for discerning rational susceptibility breakpoints. The current MIC(90) for the target gram-positive organisms would fall within this value.

Knowledge Graph

Similar Paper

In Vivo Pharmacodynamic Activity of the Glycopeptide Dalbavancin
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2007.0
Bactericidal Activity and Resistance Development Profiling of Dalbavancin
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2007.0
Activity of Dalbavancin against Bacillus anthracis In Vitro and in a Mouse Inhalation Anthrax Model
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2010.0
Activities of Dalbavancin against a Worldwide Collection of 81,673 Gram-Positive Bacterial Isolates
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2009.0
Pharmacodynamic Profile of Tigecycline against Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus in an Experimental Pneumonia Model
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2009.0
Pharmacodynamic Effects of Telavancin against Methicillin-Resistant and Methicillin-Susceptible Staphylococcus aureus Strains in the Presence of Human Albumin or Serum and in an In Vitro Kinetic Model
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2007.0
In Vivo Pharmacodynamic Target Investigation for Micafungin against Candida albicans and C. glabrata in a Neutropenic Murine Candidiasis Model
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2008.0
Pharmacodynamics of Minocycline against Staphylococcus aureus in an In Vitro Pharmacokinetic Model
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2008.0
Pharmacodynamics of Tigecycline against Phenotypically Diverse Staphylococcus aureus Isolates in a Murine Thigh Model
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2009.0
Pharmacodynamic Characterization of Ceftobiprole in Experimental Pneumonia Caused by Phenotypically Diverse Staphylococcus aureus Strains
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2008.0