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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2003, p. 1714-1718, Vol. 47, No. 5
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.5.1714-1718.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Efficacy of Daptomycin in Experimental Endocarditis Due to Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
George Sakoulas,1,2*
George M. Eliopoulos,1,2 Jeff Alder,3 and Claudie Thauvin- Eliopoulos1,2
Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center,1
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02215,2
Cubist Pharmaceuticals, Lexington, Massachusetts 024213
Received 14 May 2002/
Returned for modification 13 October 2002/
Accepted 30 December 2002

ABSTRACT
Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus is becoming increasingly
prevalent as both a nosocomial and a community-acquired pathogen.
Daptomycin, a lipopeptide antibiotic now in phase III clinical
trials, is rapidly bactericidal in vitro against a range of
gram-positive organisms, including methicillin-resistant
S. aureus (MRSA). In this study, we compared the efficacy of daptomycin
with that of vancomycin, each with or without rifampin, in a
model of experimental aortic valve endocarditis due to MRSA.
The infecting strain (MRSA strain 32) was susceptible to daptomycin
(MIC = 1 µg/ml), vancomycin (MIC = 0.5 µg/ml), and
rifampin (MIC = 0.5 µg/ml). Daptomycin was administered
at 25 or 40 mg/kg q24h (q24h) by subcutaneous injection in an
attempt to simulate human doses of 4 and 6 mg/kg q24h, respectively.
Vancomycin was given at 150 mg/kg q24h by continuous intravenous
infusion. Rifampin was given at 25 mg/kg by intramuscular injection
q24h. Treatment was started 6 h postinoculation and continued
for 4.5 days. Outcome was assessed by counting the residual
viable bacteria in vegetations. The mean peak daptomycin levels
in serum at 2 h after subcutaneous administration of 25 and
40 mg/kg were 64 and 91 µg/ml, respectively. Daptomycin
was undetectable in serum at 24 h. The total exposure was comparable
to that achieved clinically in humans receiving the drug. Bacterial
counts (mean log
10 number of CFU per gram ± the standard
deviation) in untreated controls reached 10.6 ± 0.8.
In treated rats, bacterial counts were as follows: vancomycin,
7.1 ± 2.5; daptomycin at 25 mg/kg, 5.5 ± 1.7;
daptomycin at 40 mg/kg, 4.2 ± 1.5. The difference between
daptomycin at 40 mg/kg and vancomycin at 150 mg/kg was statistically
significant (
P = 0.004). In the study of combination therapy,
vegetation bacterial counts were as follows: daptomycin at 40
mg/kg, 4.6 ± 1.6; rifampin, 3.6 ± 1.3; vancomycin
plus rifampin, 3.3 ± 1.1; daptomycin plus rifampin, 2.9
± 0.8. The difference between daptomycin and daptomycin
plus rifampin was statistically significant (
P = 0.006). These
results support the continued evaluation of daptomycin for serious
MRSA infections, including infective endocarditis.

INTRODUCTION
Daptomycin is a lipopeptide antibiotic derived from
Streptomyces roseosporus with potent bactericidal activity in vitro against
most clinically relevant gram-positive organisms, including
methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), coagulase-negative
staphylococci, vancomycin-resistant enterococci, and penicillin-resistant
Streptococcus pneumoniae (
1,
2,
10,
11,
24,
28). The mechanism
of action, while not yet fully elucidated, appears to involve
the disruption of bacterial plasma membrane function (
3,
6,
13,
16).
To date, daptomycin has been studied in complicated skin and soft-tissue infections (P. A. Matthews and M. F. DeBruin, Infect. Dis. Soc. Am., abstr. 112, 2001) and bacteremia due to gram-positive bacteria (29). A previous study was performed with daptomycin in bacterial endocarditis (data on file: study B8B-MC-AVAG, Cubist Pharmaceuticals, Inc.) (29). Given the lack of currently available antimicrobials with rapid bactericidal activity against MRSA, the continued evaluation of daptomycin in animal models of MRSA infection and in clinical MRSA infection in humans is warranted, particularly in infections such as infective endocarditis, where bactericidal therapy is crucial.
A previous animal study demonstrated that administration of daptomycin once daily (q24h) may reduce toxicity while maintaining good antibacterial activity (22). Therefore, we examined the activity of daptomycin in comparison with that of vancomycin in a rat model of MRSA aortic valve endocarditis with once-daily dosing to simulate clinical therapy. In addition, because rifampin is used clinically with vancomycin for the treatment of serious MRSA infections, we also examined the efficacy of regimens combining daptomycin or vancomycin with rifampin.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Antimicrobial agents.
Daptomycin powder (lot 670113A) was supplied by Cubist Pharmaceuticals
(Lexington, Mass.). A solution of 25 mg/ml was prepared for
subcutaneous injection in sterile distilled water. Rifampin
(Merrell Pharmaceuticals, Kansas City, Mo.) was reconstituted
with sterile distilled water to prepare a 60-mg/ml solution
for intramuscular (i.m.) injection. Vancomycin hydrochloride
(American Pharmaceutical Partners, Inc., Los Angeles, Calif.)
was infused at 7.2 ml/24 h intravenously (i.v.) in sterile saline
to administer doses of 150 mg/kg/24 h. We have previously shown
that this dose results in mean vancomycin concentrations in
serum of approximately 15 µg/ml (
31).
Microorganism.
MRSA strain 32 is a clinical isolate with the following MIC profile: daptomycin, 1 µg/ml; vancomycin, 0.5 µg/ml; oxacillin, >128 µg/ml; rifampin, 0.5 µg/ml. The MIC of vancomycin was determined by agar dilution testing in accordance with NCCLS recommendations (21). Daptomycin susceptibility testing was performed with Mueller-Hinton II agar (Becton Dickinson, Cockeysville, Md.) supplemented with calcium chloride at 50 µg/ml and confirmed by broth microdilution done separately at Cubist Pharmaceuticals (MIC, 0.8 µg/ml). Rifampin susceptibility testing was performed with a VITEK-2 AST-GP55 card (bioMérieux, St. Louis, Mo.).
Animal model.
Aortic valve endocarditis was created in male Sprague-Dawley rats (Charles River Laboratories, Wilmington, Mass.) by transvalvular placement of a polyethylene catheter and injection through the catheter of a 0.5-ml suspension of MRSA strain 32 in sterile saline (106 to 107 CFU/ml) as described previously (25), with modifications (30, 32). Animals were randomized 6 h later into different treatment groups. In the first phase of the study, groups included rats given daptomycin at 25 mg/kg subcutaneously (s.c.) q24h, daptomycin at 40 mg/kg s.c. q24h, or vancomycin at 150 mg/kg q24h as a continuous i.v. infusion and untreated controls sacrificed at day 5. The second phase of the study included administration of daptomycin at 40 mg/kg s.c. q24h, daptomycin at 40 mg/kg s.c. q24h plus rifampin at 25 mg/kg i.m. q24h, vancomycin at 150 mg/kg q24h plus rifampin at 25 mg/kg i.m. q24h, or rifampin at 25 mg/kg i.m. q24h; untreated controls sacrificed on day 5; and controls sacrificed at the time of therapy initiation (6 h). For animals receiving daptomycin with rifampin, the antibiotics were administered at the same time at two different sites. Animals that died prior to the 5-day study period were excluded if they had received less than 2 days of therapy. All control animals were included regardless of time of death.
Aortic valve vegetations were harvested aseptically on day 5 or, when dead animals were discovered, as soon as possible after death. Vegetations were weighed, homogenized in saline, serially diluted, and plated onto blood agar plates and mannitol salt agar plates. Vegetation bacterial density was expressed as the log10 number of CFU per gram of vegetation tissue. When vegetations were sterile, the value of the lowest limit of detection was assigned for analysis and statistical calculations.
Examination of surviving bacteria.
Individual bacterial colonies obtained from aortic valve tissue homogenates were grown and resuspended in 1 ml of Mueller-Hinton broth to a density equivalent to a 1.0 McFarland standard. Twenty-five microliters of this suspension and of dilutions of 101 to 107 were plated on Mueller-Hinton II agar with various concentrations of vancomycin or daptomycin (0 to 4 µg/ml). Mueller-Hinton agar was supplemented with CaCl2 at 50 µg/ml in daptomycin resistance studies. Colonies were counted at 48 h.
Pharmacokinetics.
Daptomycin (25 or 40 mg/kg) or rifampin was administered as a single s.c. or i.m. dose, respectively, to healthy male 200- to 225-g Sprague-Dawley rats (three per treatment group). Blood samples were collected in heparinized tubes via jugular vein catheters over a time range of 2 min through 24 h. Plasma was collected by centrifugation, and samples were stored at -20°C until analysis.
Daptomycin was detected with an internal standard of ethylparaben and protein precipitation, followed by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) by using methodology developed by Eli Lilly and modified slightly by Cubist Pharmaceuticals (validation report LC 309.4, version 1.00, HPLC analysis of daptomycin in rat plasma, 2001 [report on file, Cubist Pharmaceuticals]). The method has been validated for use in clinical trials. In brief, drug concentrations in serum were determined by reversed-phase HPLC with a Metachem Hypersil C8 analytical column and a Waters Xterra RP18 guard column. Daptomycin and the internal standard, ethylparaben, were isolated from rat plasma by protein precipitation. The mobile phase was 32.6% acetonitrile, and 67.4% of it was a 0.5% ammonium phosphate solution. At a flow rate of 1.5 ml/min, daptomycin shows a retention time of 14 to 16 min. Samples were analyzed at 214 nm. Detection of daptomycin concentrations in rat plasma was linear across a range of 7.5 to 400 µg/ml. Rifampin was detected by HPLC analysis as described previously (7).
Statistical analysis.
The chi-square test was used to examine differences in discrete variables such as mortality. Differences in vegetation bacterial densities were evaluated by the Kruskal-Wallis test.

RESULTS
Pharmacokinetics.
The pharmacokinetic profiles of daptomycin and rifampin in our
rat model are demonstrated in Table
1. Mean peak levels in serum
were 64 µg/ml for the 25-mg/kg dose of daptomycin and
91 µg/ml for the 40-mg/kg dose. The drug was eliminated
with a half-life of 1.6 to 2.9 h in rats, and daptomycin was
undetectable in serum at 24 h. Protein binding of daptomycin
is comparable (90 to 94%) across various species, including
rodents (
19) and humans (
17); therefore, a comparison of total
daptomycin concentrations is appropriate. Peak levels obtained
in rats were comparable to the target values obtained in humans
during treatment with a daily dose of 4 or 6 mg/kg, while the
areas under the concentration-time curves of 278 and 605 µg
x h/ml bracket the exposure obtained in humans at 4 mg/kg and
are lower than the exposure of humans treated with the 6-mg/kg
dose.
Control animals.
Vegetation bacterial density was determined for two groups of
untreated animals at 5 days and for one group of rats at the
time of initiation of therapy (6 h). The mean bacterial densities
(mean log
10 numbers of CFU per gram ± the standard deviation
[SD]) on harvested aortic valve vegetations in the two groups
of untreated controls at 5 days were 10.6 ± 0.8 (
n =
12) and 10.3 ± 0.5 (
n = 5). At the time of initiation
of therapy, the mean bacterial density was 6.4 ± 1.8
(
n = 8).
Monotherapy.
The first phase of this investigation compared daily daptomycin monotherapy at 25 or 40 mg/kg with vancomycin. Results are shown in Fig. 1. Mean bacterial densities (mean log10 numbers of CFU per gram ± the SD) on harvested aortic valve vegetations were 7.1 ± 2.5, 5.5 ± 1.7, and 4.2 ± 1.5 for animals treated with vancomycin, daptomycin at 25 mg/kg, and daptomycin at 40 mg/kg, respectively. Treatment with daptomycin resulted in a dose-dependent reduction in the number of viable bacteria, although the difference between the effects obtained with two doses of daptomycin was not statistically significant. The difference between daptomycin at 40 mg/kg and vancomycin at 150 mg/kg was statistically significant (P = 0.004). There was no significant difference in mortality at 5 days between the treatment groups, but all treatment arms showed significantly increased survival (86%) compared to that of untreated controls (8.3%).
Combination therapy.
For combination therapy, we used daptomycin at 40 mg/kg, the
more effective dose in the earlier study. The results of the
combination therapy study are shown in Fig.
2. Mean bacterial
densities (mean log
10 numbers of CFU per gram ± the SD)
on harvested aortic valve vegetations from animals treated with
the different therapies were 4.6 ± 1.6 (daptomycin at
40 mg/kg), 3.6 ± 1.3 (rifampin at 25 mg/kg), 3.3 ±
1.1 (vancomycin plus rifampin), and 2.9 ± 0.8 (daptomycin
at 40 mg/kg plus rifampin). The difference between daptomycin
plus rifampin and daptomycin monotherapy was statistically significant
(
P = 0.006) but not different from vancomycin plus rifampin
or rifampin alone. No significant survival difference between
the therapeutic arms was detected.
Surviving bacteria.
A subset of bacterial isolates obtained from aortic valve vegetations
of treated rats was evaluated by population analysis to test
for the development of resistance or heteroresistance to daptomycin
or vancomycin. We used population analysis instead of routine
susceptibility testing, given the recently characterized heterogeneous
nature of daptomycin resistance in staphylococci (
26). Representative
population analyses of bacterial colonies harvested from three
rats treated with daptomycin at 25 mg/kg q24h, two rats treated
with daptomycin at 40 mg/kg q24h, and one untreated rat are
displayed in Fig.
3. While isolates from daptomycin-treated
animals demonstrated a consistent rightward shift of the population
curve, the MIC increase was extrapolated to be less than twofold.
With a 10
8-CFU/ml inoculum, no isolate showed growth at daptomycin
concentrations of

3 µg/ml. Isolates treated with vancomycin
did not demonstrate a shift in heteroresistance to vancomycin
(data not shown). Of four isolates analyzed from four different
rifampin-treated animals, one demonstrated intermediate resistance,
with a fourfold increase in the MIC to 2 µg/ml.

DISCUSSION
Over the past decade, the incidence of multidrug-resistant gram-positive
organisms has been increasing at an alarming rate (
5). A recent
analysis showed that more than one-third of the
S.
aureus bloodstream
isolates in the United States are methicillin resistant and
that many of these isolates are resistant to multiple antibiotics
(
9). Even more troubling is a report that MRSA appears to be
spreading into the community (
9). Because of the current lack
of available antimicrobials with consistent bactericidal activity
against methicillin-resistant staphylococci and vancomycin-resistant
enterococci, therapeutic options for patients with endovascular
infections due to these organisms pose major therapeutic challenges
for clinicians. Daptomycin is a cyclic lipopeptide antibiotic
with a spectrum of activity similar to that of glycopeptides,
except that it is active against vancomycin-resistant enterococci
(
29). Its mechanism of action is incompletely defined but differs
from that of glycopeptides, involving disruption of the cell
membrane potential (
3,
4,
6,
13,
16).
The bactericidal activity of daptomycin in vitro is dependent on the pH and physiologic concentrations of ionized calcium (16). Furthermore, daptomycin is approximately 95% protein bound and its in vitro activity can be altered by the addition of serum or albumin (13, 17, 19, 23). The complex interactions of daptomycin with the surrounding environment and the influence of these interactions on its activity make it essential to demonstrate a correlation between in vitro activity and in vivo activity. Therefore, our in vivo model provides strong support for the activity of daptomycin against infection with MRSA.
Various animal studies evaluating the in vivo activity of daptomycin have demonstrated it to be comparable to that of glycopeptides (14, 15, 20). Some of these studies were performed in models in which the pharmacokinetic profile of daptomycin might not have been optimal for efficacy. Phase II clinical studies with daptomycin have demonstrated it to be comparable to conventional therapy for the treatment of gram-positive bacteremia and endocarditis (F. P. Tally, F. B. Oleson, C. L. Berman, and M. F. DeBruin, ECCMID, abstr. WeP233:8/1, 2000). A recent phase III study demonstrated a shorter duration of therapy with daptomycin compared to conventional therapy in complicated soft-tissue infections. (Matthews and DeBruin, Abstr. Infect. Dis. Soc. Am.)
In this investigation, we applied daptomycin to a well-established in vivo infection model of rat aortic valve endocarditis. It was determined that s.c. administration of daptomycin to rats at 25 and 40 mg/kg q24h resulted in maximum drug concentrations in serum that approximate those observed in humans given 4 and 6 mg/kg q24h i.v. The rat dosages resulted in exposures that bracket the 4-mg/kg clinical dose. These doses appear to be well tolerated by humans (Matthews and DeBruin, Abstr. Infect. Dis. Soc. Am.).
We demonstrated that daptomycin monotherapy administered to rats at 40 mg/kg was superior to vancomycin monotherapy, as determined by a statistically significant decrease in the bacterial density of aortic valve vegetations after 5 days of therapy. Daptomycin at 25 mg/kg showed a trend toward higher activity than vancomycin in this model, but the differences did not reach statistical significance. Although animals treated with daptomycin at 25 mg/kg or vancomycin had lower vegetation bacterial densities than untreated control animals, final counts in these treated animals were generally similar to those expected at the time treatment is begun. However, daptomycin at 40 mg/kg led to an approximately 2-log reduction and both combination regimens resulted in at least a 3-log reduction in bacterial densities over the treatment period compared with bacterial densities at the start of therapy.
Given that the pharmacokinetic profile of daptomycin in this model resulted in trough levels that were nondetectable, potential development of resistance was a concern. Evaluation of bacteria harvested from aortic valve vegetations of treated animals showed a small rightward shift in the population analysis curves, but the extrapolated MICs of daptomycin were less than twofold greater than those for the strains isolated from untreated animals. These findings are consistent with previous reports that found that the frequency of spontaneous daptomycin resistance is S. aureus is very low (14, 18).
This study provides evidence that the bactericidal activity of daptomycin is augmented by the addition of rifampin. Both daptomycin and vancomycin performed better in combination with rifampin. Bacterial endocarditis is a serious infection that could benefit from aggressive combination bactericidal therapy that maintains acceptable safety.
We chose rifampin for our combination therapy study primarily because it has been used concomitantly with ß-lactams and glycopeptides to enhance the bactericidal activity of clinically applied antimicrobial regimens (12, 27). Rifampin has the ability to attain high intracellular concentrations in endothelial cells (8). It has been suggested that bacteria within endothelial cells may be important in the pathogenesis of bacterial endocarditis, particularly with the ability of bacteria to cause infection on normal valves and relapses despite long courses of treatment (8). Therefore, antimicrobials targeting bacteria in endothelial cells may provide advantages in endocarditis management. Rifampin maintains activity against most clinical MRSA isolates (9). Also, the target of action of rifampin lies within the bacterium and therefore might possibly complement daptomycin, which targets the cell membrane. Furthermore, rifampin avoids the ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity concerns that accompany the use of aminoglycosides. Nevertheless, the in vivo activity of daptomycin-aminoglycoside combination therapy probably warrants further study, particularly for enterococci.
In our infection model, rifampin monotherapy demonstrated unexpected efficacy. This may perhaps be explained by the fact that spontaneous resistance to rifampin in S. aureus occurs in approximately 1 in 107 organisms. Therefore, the inoculum size of infection at the time treatment was begun in the model was probably not sufficiently great to allow selection of resistance to rifampin.
In summary, we demonstrated with an in vivo experimental model of MRSA endocarditis that daptomycin administered at a dose corresponding to a human dose of 4 to 6 mg/kg q24h was comparable to or better than therapy with vancomycin and that the combination of rifampin with daptomycin was superior to daptomycin alone. No development of resistance to daptomycin was detected, and it was not possible to evaluate whether daptomycin would prevent the emergence of resistance to rifampin. The excellent bactericidal activity of daptomycin-rifampin combination therapy in vivo warrants further investigation of this regimen in humans with serious endovascular infections due to MRSA.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by funding from Cubist Pharmaceuticals,
Lexington, Mass.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Present address: Infectious Disease-Crystal Run Healthcare, 155 Crystal Run Rd., Middletown, N.Y. 10941. Phone: (845) 703-6999. Fax: (845) 361-1156. E-mail:
gsakoulas{at}crystalrunhealthcare.com.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2003, p. 1714-1718, Vol. 47, No. 5
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.5.1714-1718.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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