Reply to Kalil et al., "Is Daptomycin plus Ceftaroline Associated with Better Clinical Outcomes than Standard of Care Monotherapy for Staphylococcus aureus Bacteremia?"
AUTHOR REPLY
crossm
Reply to Kalil et al., “Is Daptomycin plus Ceftaroline
Associated with Better Clinical Outcomes than Standard of
Care Monotherapy for Staphylococcus aureus Bacteremia?”
George Sakoulas,a,b Matthew Geriak,a Fadi Haddad,c Warren Rose,d Kerry LaPlante,e Marcus Zervos,f Ravina Kullar,g
Victor Nizetb
a
Sharp Memorial Hospital, San Diego, California, USA
b
University of California San Diego School of Medicine, La Jolla, California, USA
c
Sharp Grossmont Hospital, La Mesa, California, USA
d
University of Wisconsin School of Pharmacy, Madison, Wisconsin, USA
e
University of Rhode Island College of Pharmacy, Kingston, Rhode Island, USA
f
Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan, USA
g
Doctor Evidence, LLC, Santa Monica, California, USA
W
e appreciate the comments by Kalil et al. regarding the results of the study by
Geriak et al. (1). We are aware of the methodological limitations mentioned, as
they are discussed in our paper. As a result, we acknowledge that our study falls short
of the robust expectations of what would be considered a “practice-changing” clinical
trial. We applaud a critical commentary on these limitations given the potential
implications on practice.
The letter by Kalil et al. implies that the standard of care monotherapy patient group
had a higher mortality than the combination therapy patients because the deck was
stacked against them with respect to comorbidities. They highlight the “disadvantages”
of the monotherapy patients without mentioning the “disadvantages” of the combination group, all of which are numerical rather than statistical differences. While the
higher procalcitonin and C-reactive protein concentrations suggest “a more inflammatory state” in the monotherapy group, it is important to note that white blood cell
count, interleukin-10 concentrations, and number of endocarditis patients were higher
in the combination patient group. In previous studies, only age, endovascular source,
and renal insufficiency are consistent predictors of mortality in Staphylococcus aureus
bacteremia (2). The 26% in-hospital/30-day mortality seen with standard of care patient
population in the Geriak study is well within expectations of mortality for methicillinresistant S. aureus (MRSA) bacteremia (2). The difference in this study was the 0%
mortality in the combination group, despite having Charlson comorbidity and Pitt
bacteremia scores that were similar to those of the monotherapy group.
Kalil et al. state that the randomization in this trial was “flawed.” We point out that
a matter of chance brought more patients in the monotherapy arm (23 patients) than
the combination arm (17 patients). The percentage of patients in each group (57.5%/
42.5%) was similar to the allocation of patients in a recent small randomized trial of
fecal microbiota transplant (55%/45%) reported by Juul et al. (3). This can occur during
early enrollment due to chance but will often even out over time with continued
randomization, which could not occur in our study due to early termination.
Kalil et al. are correct that one patient either way would sway results away from
statistical significance due to the small number of patients, but as the study was not
carried out in a blinded manner, continuation of this study posed an ethical dilemma
that could not allow continuation for the sake of statistical perfection. A data safety
monitoring board, while ideal, was not funded for, and an nonblinded study such as
November 2019 Volume 63 Issue 11 e01347-19
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
Citation Sakoulas G, Geriak M, Haddad F, Rose
W, LaPlante K, Zervos M, Kullar R, Nizet V. 2019.
Reply to Kalil et al., “Is daptomycin plus
ceftaroline associated with better clinical
outcomes than standard of care monotherapy
for Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia?”
Antimicrob Agents Chemother 63:e01347-19.
https://doi.org/10.1128/AAC.01347-19.
Copyright © 2019 American Society for
Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Address correspondence to George Sakoulas,
.
This is a response to a letter by Kalil et al.
https://doi.org/10.1128/AAC.00900-19.
Published 22 October 2019
aac.asm.org 1
Author Reply
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
FIG 1 Retrospective survival analysis of the first 11 patients receiving combination therapy with
daptomycin plus ceftaroline (n ⫽ 11) at our hospital as part of a drug utilization evaluation compared to
matched patients (1:2 ratio based on source of bacteremia, age, and renal function) receiving vancomycin monotherapy (n ⫽ 22). These were all pretrial patients. The P values for the difference in mortality
at different times follow: after 30 days, P ⫽ 0.2; after 60 days, P ⫽ 0.14; after 1 year P ⫽ 0.06.
this where investigators were concerned of the adverse outcomes befalling monotherapy patients, would likely have not changed the results of the study or its early
discontinuation. Thus, only a larger blinded study would be able to overcome these
limitations, but at what cost?
We believe the results of this study achieved after 40 patients accurately reflect a
survival benefit of early daptomycin plus ceftaroline versus vancomycin in MRSA
bacteremia, albeit in a suboptimal fashion. The results are consistent with our previous
unpublished drug utilization evaluation (DUE) of daptomycin plus ceftaroline versus
vancomycin for MRSA bacteremia from two hospitals initiated by antimicrobial stewardship personnel prior to this study. The DUE involved a retrospective analysis of 11
pretrial patients (the first such treated patients at our institution) treated with daptomycin plus ceftaroline matched (age within 10 years, renal function, and infection
source) to 22 vancomycin-treated patients and showed a strong (but not statistically
significant) survival benefit in daptomycin plus ceftaroline patients (Fig. 1). Interestingly, mortality with the combination treatment was 0%.
The main conclusion of our study should be that there are potentially better
treatment options for use in MRSA bacteremia. However, our study fails to provide the
answer as to the optimal treatment that collectively integrates efficacy, tolerability, and
cost of therapy. Therefore, the results of our study should direct scientific leadership
toward a next step to compare other treatments to vancomycin in MRSA bacteremia,
such as daptomycin plus an antistaphylococcal beta lactam or vancomycin plus ceftaroline, or perhaps even ceftaroline alone. The favorable daptomycin plus fosfomycin
data for MRSA bacteremia from Spanish investigators is of interest (4). The results of the
recent CAMERA-2 trial examining vancomycin plus flucloxacillin versus vancomycin
alone for MRSA bacteremia reiterated the nephrotoxicity risk that has been seen with
patients treated with vancomycin plus piperacillin-tazobactam (5, 6). This adverse effect
overshadowed any positive outcomes, such as more rapid MRSA bacteremia clearance
with that combination, and cautions against the use of vancomycin plus a penicillin as (...truncated)