Telavancin is a novel semisynthetic lipoglycopeptide antibiotic undergoing FDA review for complicated skin and skin-structure infections; this agent is also in phase 3 clinical trials for the treatment of hospital-acquired pneumonia caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) or multidrug-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae. Telavancin exerts its antibacterial action via a dual mode of action involving both inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis and disruption of the bacterial cell membrane; the latter of these effects is believed to improve the rate of killing observed with telavancin compared with other glycopeptides. In vitro, telavancin exhibits good activity against a variety of gram-positive organisms, including drug-resistant S pneumoniae, MRSA, vancomycin intermediate-susceptible and vancomycin-resistant S aureus, and vancomycin-resistant enterococci. Clinical data have demonstrated that telavancin is at least as effective as comparator agents for a variety of infectious processes...
Abstract
Over the past few decades, resistant bacteria have continued to increase in prevalence and significance. The historical gold standard for the treatment of infections caused by resistant gram-positive pathogens has been vancomycin. Unfortunately, contemporary use of vancomycin has been tempered by increasing rates of resistance, leading researchers to investigate other antimicrobial options. Telavancin is a novel semisynthetic lipoglycopeptide antibiotic undergoing FDA review for complicated skin and skin-structure infections; this agent is also in phase 3 clinical trials for the treatment of hospital-acquired pneumonia caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) or multidrug-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae. Telavancin exerts its antibacterial action via a dual mode of action involving both inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis and disruption of the bacterial cell membrane; the latter of these effects is believed to improve the rate of killing observed with telavancin compared with other glycopeptides. In vitro, telavancin exhibits good activity against a variety of gram-positive organisms, including drug-resistant S pneumoniae, MRSA, vancomycin intermediate-susceptible and vancomycin-resistant S aureus, and vancomycin-resistant enterococci. Clinical data have demonstrated that telavancin is at least as effective as comparator agents for a variety of infectious processes. In general, this agent appears to be well tolerated, with patients typically experiencing relatively mild adverse events. Telavancin has the potential to become a much-needed addition to the antimicrobial arsenal. (Formulary. 2007;42:545–557.)
Resistant gram-positive pathogens such as drug-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin intermediate-susceptible and vancomycin-resistant S aureus (VISA and VRSA, respectively), and vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) represent formidable therapeutic challenges for clinicians. Over the past few decades, these resistant bacteria have continued to increase in prevalence and significance. It has been estimated that there are approximately 125,969 hospitalizations annually for a diagnosis of infection secondary to MRSA.1 MRSA accounts for an estimated 12% of all nosocomial bacteremias, 28% of surgical wound infections, and 21% of nosocomial skin infections.2 Infections secondary to MRSA result in excess costs of approximately $4,000 per patient per hospitalization compared with patients infected with methicillin-susceptible S aureus (MSSA).3
The historical gold standard for the treatment of infections caused by resistant gram-positive pathogens has been vancomycin. Unfortunately, contemporary use of vancomycin has been tempered by increasing rates of resistance among pathogens such as S aureus and Enterococcus species. Furthermore, clinicians have become concerned about the relatively slow rates of kill noted with vancomycin compared with other agents such as the beta-lactams and the possible implications of this slow kill rate for treatment outcomes.4,5 Additionally, the need for therapeutic drug monitoring with vancomycin and lingering concerns regarding possible drug-related nephrotoxicity and infusion-related adverse events have left clinicians searching for an acceptable therapeutic alternative. During the past decade, several new agents have been developed in an effort to combat the growing problem of resistance among gram-positive pathogens. One agent currently in development is telavancin (Theravance). Telavancin is a novel lipoglycopeptide antibiotic that is undergoing FDA review for complicated skin and skin-structure infections; this agent is also in phase 3 clinical trials for the treatment of hospital-acquired pneumonia caused by MRSA or multidrug-resistant S pneumoniae.
CHEMISTRY AND PHARMACOLOGY
Telavancin and other new lipoglycopeptide derivatives, such as dalbavancin and ortivancin, were designed to provide broad coverage against gram-positive organisms and to address the escalating problems of VRE and MRSA. It is believed that the improved activity noted with telavancin may be the result of a dual mechanism of action exerted against gram-positive bacterial species.8 Like the glycopeptides, telavancin inhibits microbial growth by binding to the D-Ala-D-Ala moiety of cell wall precursors, thereby disrupting peptidoglycan synthesis. However, the level of telavancin's antimicrobial activity has not been correlated with the degree of peptidoglycan inhibition via this means, thus suggesting the existence of an additional mechanism of action.7
Higgins et al6 sought to elucidate the molecular mechanism of the antibacterial action of telavancin. The investigators compared the degree of inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis and the effects on membrane potential and permeability elicited by telavancin, vancomycin, and THRX-881620 (a hexapeptide analog of telavancin deficient of the N-terminal amino acid in the carboxylate binding pocket). The investigators noted that despite having approximately 5-fold reduced affinity for the D-Ala-D-Ala moiety compared with vancomycin, telavancin was approximately 10 times more potent at inhibiting peptidoglycan synthesis than vancomycin. Furthermore, the researchers observed that telavancin was largely bound to the D-Ala-D-Ala moiety of peptidoglycan within the cell membrane, whereas vancomycin binds primarily to moieties located within the cell wall. A second mechanism of action was also observed with telavancin: perturbation of bacterial cell permeability, resulting in leakage of intracellular adenosine-5'-triphosphate (ATP) and potassium, thereby leading to altered membrane potential. The authors suggested that telavancin-induced changes in the cell membrane were responsible for the rapid concentration-dependent bactericidal activity noted with telavancin.
Telavancin's dual mechanism of action is of great importance not only because of the rapid antibacterial action afforded, but also because this mechanism may help to deter the development of resistance to telavancin. Sahm et al9 observed a low potential for telavancin-induced resistance in vitro among several clinically important gram-positive species, including MSSA, Staphylococcus epidermidis (methicillin-resistant, vancomycin-resistant, and daptomycin-nonsusceptible), VRE, and multidrug-resistant Streptococcus species.
PHARMACOKINETICS
As part of a 2-phase, dose-ranging study, Shaw et al10 analyzed the pharmaco-kinetic profile of telavancin in a group of healthy male volunteers after administration of single and multiple infusions. In the first phase of this study, participants received telavancin via a single intravenous (IV) infusion at doses ranging from 0.25 to 15 mg/kg. After this infusion, telavancin exhibited a brief distribution phase followed by a monoexponential elimination phase. The investigators noted that telavancin exhibited linear pharmacokinetics at doses ≤12.5 mg/kg; however, at doses higher than this, a dose-proportional increase in maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) was noted. Additionally, the elimination half-life (t1/2) of telavancin increased as the dose was increased (range, 2.9 h after 0.25-mg/kg dosing–9.1 h after 15-mg/kg dosing).
Human and animal data suggest that telavancin exhibits a high degree (>90%) of protein binding.8,12 This characteristic makes knowledge of free drug concentrations at likely sites of infection critical. Sun et al13 evaluated the penetration of telavancin into the blister fluid of 9 healthy volunteers. The volunteers received three 7.5-mg/kg doses administered every 24 hours via a 60-minute infusion. After the last dose, the mean telavancin plasma concentration was 84.8 mcg/mL compared with a mean blister fluid concentration of 16.0 mcg/mL (steady-state AUC blister fluid:steady-state AUC plasma ~40%). The estimated free drug concentrations in the blister fluid exceeded the reported minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of telavancin for MSSA, MRSA, penicillin-susceptible and penicillin-resistant S pneumoniae, and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecalis. Penetration of telavancin into human pulmonary epithelial lining fluid and alveolar macrophages has also been described.14 After 3 daily doses of 10 mg/kg, mean total telavancin concentrations in the epithelial lining fluid of healthy volunteers exceeded 0.9 mcg/mL at all time points during the 24-hour sampling period. Of added significance was the observation that drug concentrations were consistently higher in alveolar macrophages than in the epithelial lining fluid at all times examined.
SPECTRUM OF ACTIVITY
Telavancin has also demonstrated activity against a variety of gram-positive anaerobes, including Actinomyces, Clostridium (including Clostridium difficile), Eubacterium, Lactobacillus (diminished activity was noted against Lactobacillus casei), Propionibacterium, Peptostreptococcus anaerobius, and Corynebacterium.23
CLINICAL TRIALS
Preliminary results from the Assessment of Telavancin in Skin and Skin Structure Infections (ATLAS 1) trial, a large, randomized, double-blind, phase 3 study, demonstrated the noninferiority of telavancin (10 mg/kg once daily) compared with vancomycin (1 g every 12 h) for the treatment of gram-positive skin and soft-tissue infections in 855 patients.26 Response rates among clinically evaluable patients were observed to be similar in the telavancin-treated and vancomycin-treated groups (87.9% vs 86.5%, respectively). Additionally, no difference was observed between the telavancin-treated and vancomycin-treated groups with respect to microbiologic cure rates among evaluable patients and in the MRSA subset (89.5% vs 85.9% and 87.1% vs 84.8%, respectively).
A second phase 3 trial comparing the efficacy of telavancin and vancomycin for the treatment of complicated skin and skin-structure infections, the ATLAS 2 trial, also demonstrated the noninferiority of telavancin.27 In this trial, which included 1,012 patients, cure among clinically evaluable patients was observed in 88.7% of patients treated with telavancin and in 87.6% of patients treated with vancomycin. Furthermore, similar rates of microbiologic eradication were observed in evaluable patients and in the MRSA subset of patients. However, when an end point of overall therapeutic response (cure plus eradication) was assessed in evaluable patients, patients treated with telavancin achieved a higher response than those treated with vancomycin (92% vs 84.7%, respectively).
Telavancin is currently in phase 3 trials for the treatment of hospital-acquired pneumonia due to gram-positive bacteria, including resistant strains such as MRSA.
ADVERSE EVENTS
Preclinical in vitro hERG assay data and early clinical data have demonstrated that treatment with telavancin may prolong the QTc interval when administered at doses >7.5 mg/kg. In 1 of the phase 2 trials, mean QTc wave length was 12.5 ms longer in patients receiving telavancin 10 mg/kg once daily compared with patients receiving standard therapy consisting of vancomycin, nafcillin, oxacillin, or cloxacillin (P≤.0001).25 In the other phase 2 trial, a 6.4-ms prolongation in the QTc interval was observed among patients receiving telavancin 7.5 mg/kg versus those receiving standard therapy.24 There were no documented adverse cardiac events associated with QTc wave prolongation in either of the aforementioned trials.24,25 However, because of these observations, 160 patients were enrolled in a study designed to examine the effect of telavancin on QTc interval.28 Patients were randomized to receive either placebo, telavancin 7.5 mg/kg or 15 mg/kg, or moxifloxacin 400 mg. Placebo-corrected prolongations in QTc intervals of 4.1 msec, 4.5 msec, and 9.2 msec were noted with telavancin 7.5 mg/kg (P=.036), telavancin 15 mg/kg (P=.027), and moxifloxacin (P<.001), respectively. Although the clinical relevance of this mild cardiac effect appears to be negligible, continued evaluation of telavancin in clinical trials will provide further information about the importance of this finding.
DRUG INTERACTIONS
Information regarding clinically significant drug interactions with telavancin is not yet available.
DOSING AND ADMINISTRATION
The dosing regimen that will be recommended if telavancin is approved by FDA has not yet been established. However, doses of 7.5 to 10 mg/kg administered via IV every 24 hours have been evaluated in phase 2 trials and appear to be both efficacious and well tolerated.24,25 The dose of 10 mg/kg is being further evaluated in phase 3 studies.26,27
Dr Knechtel is a pharmacy practice resident, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Illinois. Ms Jacobs is a PharmD candidate, Purdue University School of Pharmacy, West Lafayette, Indiana. Dr Klepser is a professor, Borgess Medical Center, Ferris State University College of Pharmacy, Kalamazoo, Michigan.
Disclosure Information: The authors report no financial disclosures as related to products discussed in this article.
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David Calabrese of OptumRx Talks Top Three Drugs in Pipeline, Industry Trends in Q2
July 1st 2020In this week's episode of Tuning Into The C-Suite podcast, MHE's Briana Contreras chatted with David Calabrese, R.Ph, MHP, who is senior vice president and chief pharmacy officer of pharmacy care services company, OptumRx. David is also a member of Managed Healthcare Executives’ Editorial Advisory Board. During the discussion, he shared the OptumRx Quarter 2 Drug Pipeline Insights Report of 2020. Some of the information shared includes the three notable drugs currently being reviewed or those that have been recently approved by the FDA. Also discussed were any interesting industry trends to watch for.
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