4.3 Review

High-Dose Daptomycin and Clinical Applications

Journal

ANNALS OF PHARMACOTHERAPY
Volume 55, Issue 11, Pages 1363-1378

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1060028021991943

Keywords

daptomycin; gram positive; high dose; pharmacotherapy

Funding

  1. Georgia Clinical and Translational Science aliance (GA-CTSA) via the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [TL1TR002382, UL1TR002378]

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High-dose daptomycin shows superior efficacy in serious gram-positive infections, particularly in endocarditis and bacteremia caused by MRSA and Enterococcus. Consideration of clearance modality is necessary for dosing in renal replacement therapy, and concerns exist regarding elevated exposures in obesity. Clinicians are encouraged to evaluate dosing standards for different infectious etiologies and patient populations.
Objective: To evaluate evidence for high-dose daptomycin (doses >= 8 mg/kg/d). Data Sources: A PubMed/MEDLINE literature search was performed (January 2000 to December 2020) using the search terms daptomycin, high dose, and dosing. Review article references and society guidelines were reviewed. Study Selection and Data Extraction: Clinical trials, observational studies, retrospective studies, meta-analyses, and systematic reviews reporting on high-dose daptomycin were included. Data Synthesis: Experimentally, daptomycin outperforms other antimicrobials for high inoculum and biofilm-associated infections. Clinically, high-dose daptomycin is supported as salvage and first-line therapy for endocarditis and bacteremia, primarily when caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (when vancomycin minimum inhibitory concentration is >1 mg/L) and Enterococcus. High-dose daptomycin appears effective for osteomyelitis and central nervous system infections, although comparative studies are lacking. High dosing in renal replacement therapy requires considering clearance modality to achieve exposures like normal renal function. Weight-based dosing in obesity draws concern for elevated exposures, although high doses have not been evaluated kinetically in obesity. Some data show benefits of high doses in overweight populations. Burn patients clear daptomycin more rapidly, and high doses may only achieve drug exposures similar to standard doses (6 mg/kg). Relevance to Patient Care and Clinical Practice: This review analyzes the efficacy and safety of high-dose daptomycin in serious gram-positive infections. Discussion of specific infectious etiologies and patient populations should encourage clinicians to evaluate their daptomycin dosing standards. Conclusions: The efficacy of high-dose daptomycin and limited safety concerns encourage clinicians to consider high-dose daptomycin more liberally in severe gram-positive infections.

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