4.3 Article

Successful Treatment of VentriculostomyAssociated Meningitis Caused by Multidrug Resistant Coagulase-Negative Staphylococcus epidermidis Using LowVolume Intrathecal Daptomycin and Loading Strategy

Journal

ANNALS OF PHARMACOTHERAPY
Volume 48, Issue 10, Pages 1376-1379

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1060028014542634

Keywords

daptomycin; intrathecal; ventriculostomy; meningitis

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Objective: To report successful use of low-volume intrathecal (IT) daptonnycin and loading strategy for the treatment of ventriculostomy-associated meningitis. Case Summary: A 23-year-old man with a history of multiple ventriculoperitoneal shunt revisions resulting from multidrug-resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis shunt infection presented with meningitis despite suppressive antibiotic therapy. After source control surgery, the patient improved with intravenous daptomycin plus IT vanconnycin. Then, 4 days later, significant ventriculostonny output occurred, and the S epidermidis was confirmed to be intermediately sensitive to vanconnycin (MIC = 8 mu g/nnL) and susceptible to daptomycin (MIC = 2 mu g/mL). IT vanconnycin was changed to IT daptomycin 5 mg in 3 mL normal saline (NS) every 24 hours for 3 days, then every 72 hours for 18 days. The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was sterile after I day of IT daptomycin and remained so. Creatine kinase remained normal throughout the course of treatment. The patient was discharged on hospital day 50 without antibiotics. Discussion: IT daptomycin has been reported for adult doses ranging from 5 to 10 mg once every 24 to 72 hours in volumes ranging from 5 to 10 mL; drug accumulation has been seen after the third dose of once every 24 hours dosing, and delayed improvement has been seen with once every 72 hours dosing. We planned for rapid load and CSF sterilization and extended the dosing interval once drug accumulation was expected to have occurred. Conclusions: IT daptomycin 5 mg diluted to 3 mL in NS and dosed in a loading strategy was effective and without adverse sequelae.

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