Abstract
Patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) requiring intermittent haemodialysis (IHD) are at high risk of MRSA bacteraemia (MRSA-B) and often fail first-line therapy. The safety, effectiveness and optimal dosing of telavancin for MRSA-B in this patient population are unclear. We aimed to describe clinical outcomes of telavancin in the treatment of refractory MRSA-B in patients with ESRD requiring IHD. This was a retrospective study of hospitalized patients at two tertiary care academic medical centres with recurrent or persistent (≥3 days) MRSA-B treated with telavancin monotherapy. Outcomes included duration of MRSA-B (pre-telavancin versus post-telavancin) and microbiological failure (duration of MRSA-B ≥3 days after initiation of telavancin). Telavancin dosed 10 mg/kg three times weekly post-IHD or 10 mg/kg every 48 h resulted in microbiological cure in 7/8 (87.5%) refractory MRSA-B cases. Telavancin monotherapy was associated with a significant reduction in median duration of bacteraemia [16 days pre-telavancin (IQR 8-19 days) versus 1 day post-telavancin (IQR 0-2 days); P = 0.018]. Telavancin was well tolerated by all patients and no adverse events were reported. Telavancin was very safe and highly effective in the treatment of refractory MRSA-B in a cohort of patients with ESRD requiring IHD. These data support the utility of telavancin in the armamentarium against refractory MRSA-B, particularly in the high-risk IHD-dependent population.
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