A Pharmacologic Approach to Prevent Daptomycin Resistance in VRE

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $385,000 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

 DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Infections caused by vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREfm) are plagued by limited treatment options and are associated with increased mortality compared to vancomycin-susceptible strains. Daptomycin (DAP), a lipopeptide antibiotic with activity contingent upon an optimized area under the concentration curve (AUC) over the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the VREfm strain, possesses potent activity against VREfm. However, resistance to DAP occurs clinically, and data demonstrate that doses above the currently approved 6 mg/kg/day are necessary to prevent DAP resistance emergence. Even elevated DAP doses may not be sufficient to prevent resistance, as VREfm with mutations in two different regulatory gene systems (liaFSR and yycFG) demonstrate the ability to resist treatment with DAP alone. These mutations are frequent among VREfm with DAP MICs in the higher levels of "susceptible" (3-4 µg/ml). As such, novel therapeutic regimens involving combinations are necessary and warrant study. Beta-lactams are of interest in combination with DAP; as limited in vitro data have demonstrated the ability of beta-lactams to enhance DAP activity against VREfm. The overall objective of our study is to define the DAP dose exposure breakpoint (pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic [PK/PD] breakpoint) with DAP regimens alone against VREfm with known genetic changes giving them proclivity for DAP resistance and then evaluate the ability of beta-lactams to positively affect that breakpoint. These data will provide important information on the optimal DAP exposure (dosing regimens) in combination with beta-lactams to prevent DAP resistance and provide bactericidal activity. The long-term goal is to optimize VREfm infection patient outcomes and preserve DAP as a viable agent against these resistant pathogens while determining the optimal beta-lactam to use in combination for DAP resistance prevention when the DAP MIC is elevated. The central hypothesis is that beta-lactams will increase the DAP AUC0-24/MIC ratio by lowering the VREfm DAP MIC and thus provide improved resistance prevention and bactericidal activity. The rationale behind the proposed research is that data on the DAP dose relationship with VREfm and how it is affected by beta-lactam co-therapy will lead to optimal treatment regimens for patients with these insidious infections. The central hypothesis will be tested by pursuing three Specific Aims: 1) Determine if an AUC24h/MIC breakpoint is achievable at clinical dosages to overcome DAP resistance in VREfm with predisposition for DAP resistance in an in vitro PK/PD model, 2) Evaluate several key beta-lactams to optimize DAP AUC24h/MIC exposure and restore DAP activity against VREfm with predisposition for DAP resistance in an in vitro PK/PD model, and 3) test the in vitro derived DAP AUC24h/MIC exposures alone and in combination with a beta-lactam for VRE-faecium in a well-established animal endocardit...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9821185
Project number
5R01AI121400-05
Recipient
WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Michael Joseph Rybak
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$385,000
Award type
5
Project period
2015-12-10 → 2021-11-30