Antimicrobial salvage therapy for persistent staphylococcal bacteremia using daptomycin plus ceftaroline.
Sakoulas. George G; Moise. Pamela A PA; Casapao. Anthony M AM; Nonejuie. Poochit P; Olson. Joshua J; Okumura. Cheryl Y M CY; Rybak. Michael J MJ; Kullar. Ravina R; Dhand. Abhay A; Rose. Warren E WE; Goff. Debra A DA; Bressler. Adam M AM; Lee. Yuman Y; Pogliano. Joseph J; Johns. Scott S; Kaatz. Glenn W GW; Ebright. John R JR; Nizet. Victor V
Key Findings
- Daptomycin + ceftaroline cleared persistent staphylococcal bacteremia in a median of 2 days.
- Ceftaroline synergizes with daptomycin and boosts killing of MRSA by the host peptide LL‑37 and neutrophils.
- Exposure to low‑dose ceftaroline reduced MRSA virulence in a mouse infection model.
Practical Outcomes
- For most self‑experimenters, the results aren’t directly actionable because the study deals with hospital‑level antibiotic therapy, not a supplement or DIY peptide regimen. It does, however, highlight that certain antibiotic combos can enhance the body’s innate defenses, which may be of interest to those tracking emerging clinical strategies.
Summary
A study of 26 patients with hard‑to‑treat staph blood infections found that adding the antibiotic ceftaroline to daptomycin cleared the infection much faster (about 2 days versus 10 days on previous drugs). Lab tests showed that ceftaroline helped daptomycin work better and made the bacteria more vulnerable to the body’s natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 and to immune cells.
Abstract
Guidelines recommend daptomycin combination therapy as an option for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bacteremia after vancomycin failure. Recent data suggest that combining daptomycin with a β-lactam may have unique benefits; however, there are very limited clinical data regarding the use of ceftaroline with daptomycin. All 26 cases from the 10 medical centers in which ceftaroline plus daptomycin was used for treatment of documented refractory staphylococcal bacteremia from March 2011 to November 2012 were included. In vitro (synergy studies, binding assays, cathelicidin LL-37 killing assays), and in vivo (virulence assays using a murine subcutaneous infection model) studies examining the effects of ceftaroline with daptomycin were also performed. Daptomycin plus ceftaroline was used in 26 cases of staphylococcal bacteremia (20 MRSA, 2 vancomycin-intermediate S aureus, 2 methicillin-susceptible S aureus [MSSA], 2 methicillin-resistant S epidermidis). Bacteremia persisted for a median of 10 days (range, 3-23 days) on previous antimicrobial therapy. After daptomycin plus ceftaroline was started, the median time to bacteremia clearance was 2 days (range, 1-6 days). In vitro studies showed ceftaroline synergy against MRSA and enhanced MRSA killing by cathelicidin LL-37 and neutrophils. Ceftaroline also induced daptomycin binding in MSSA and MRSA to a comparable degree as nafcillin. MRSA grown in subinhibitory concentrations of ceftaroline showed attenuated virulence in a murine subcutaneous infection model. Ceftaroline plus daptomycin may be an option to hasten clearance of refractory staphylococcal bacteremia. Ceftaroline offers dual benefit via synergy with both daptomycin and sensitization to innate host defense peptide cathelicidin LL37, which could attenuate virulence of the pathogen.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-07-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.clinthera.2014.05.061
168
31