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Extended-Duration Dosing and Distribution of Dalbavancin into Bone and Articular Tissue
Author(s) -
Michael W. Dunne,
Sailaja Puttagunta,
Craig R. Sprenger,
Chris Rubino,
Scott Van Wart,
James Baldassarre
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.07
H-Index - 259
eISSN - 1070-6283
pISSN - 0066-4804
DOI - 10.1128/aac.04550-14
Subject(s) - dalbavancin , dosing , pharmacokinetics , medicine , staphylococcus aureus , osteomyelitis , pharmacology , methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus , vancomycin , surgery , biology , bacteria , genetics
Dalbavancin is an intravenous lipoglycopeptide with activity against Gram-positive pathogens and an MIC90 forStaphylococcus aureus of 0.06 μg/ml. With a terminal half-life of >14 days, dosing regimens with infrequent parenteral administration become available to treat infectious diseases such as osteomyelitis and endocarditis that otherwise require daily dosing for many weeks. In order to support a rationale for these novel regimens, the pharmacokinetics over an extended dosing interval and the distribution of dalbavancin into bone and articular tissue were studied in two phase I trials and pharmacokinetic modeling was performed. Intravenous administration of 1,000 mg of dalbavancin on day 1 followed by 500 mg weekly for seven additional weeks was well tolerated and did not demonstrate evidence of drug accumulation. In a separate study, dalbavancin concentrations in cortical bone 12 h after infusion of a single 1,000-mg intravenous infusion were 6.3 μg/g and 2 weeks later were 4.1 μg/g. A two-dose, once-weekly regimen that would provide tissue exposure over the dalbavancin MIC forStaphylococcus aureus for 8 weeks, maximizing the initial exposure to treatment while minimizing the frequency of intravenous therapy, is proposed.

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