Drug Monograph

Daptomycin

daptomycin for injection (Cubicin, Cubicin RF)

Cyclic Lipopeptide Antibiotic·IV Only·Concentration-Dependent Bactericidal
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
~8 hours
Bioavailability
IV only (no oral formulation)
Protein Binding
90–93% (concentration-independent)
Volume of Distribution
~0.1 L/kg (~7 L; primarily intravascular)
Excretion
~78% renal (52% as active drug); ~5.7% fecal
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Cyclic lipopeptide antibiotic
Available Doses
500 mg lyophilised vial (reconstitute with 0.9% NaCl to 50 mg/mL)
Route
IV only: 2-min push or 30-min infusion (adults); 30–60-min infusion (pediatrics)
Renal Adjustment
CrCl <30 mL/min: extend to q48h (adults)
Hepatic Adjustment
Not required for mild-moderate impairment
Pregnancy
No evidence of adverse developmental outcomes in animal studies; use if benefit outweighs risk
Lactation
Present in breast milk (~0.1% maternal dose); consider risk-benefit
Schedule / Legal Status
Prescription only (not scheduled)
Generic Available
Yes
Key Safety Alert
NOT indicated for pneumonia (inactivated by surfactant)
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Complicated skin and skin structure infections (cSSSI) caused by S. aureus (MRSA/MSSA), S. pyogenes, S. agalactiae, S. dysgalactiae subsp. equisimilis, and E. faecalis (vancomycin-susceptible only)Adults and pediatrics 1–17 yearsMonotherapyFDA Approved
S. aureus bloodstream infections (bacteremia) including right-sided infective endocarditis, caused by MSSA and MRSAAdults and pediatrics 1–17 yearsMonotherapyFDA Approved

Daptomycin is the first cyclic lipopeptide antibiotic, approved in 2003. It provides rapid concentration-dependent bactericidal activity against Gram-positive organisms, including MRSA and VRE. Its unique mechanism of action — calcium-dependent insertion into the bacterial cell membrane causing depolarisation — means cross-resistance with other antibiotic classes is uncommon. Daptomycin is available only as an IV formulation because it is not orally absorbed. Two critical limitations govern its use: it is inactivated by pulmonary surfactant and therefore must not be used for pneumonia, and it is not approved for left-sided infective endocarditis.

Off-Label Uses

VRE infections (including bacteremia and endocarditis): Daptomycin is active against E. faecium and E. faecalis, including vancomycin-resistant strains. Frequently used off-label for VRE bacteremia. Evidence quality: Moderate (IDSA guidelines; observational studies).

Left-sided endocarditis (salvage therapy): Used off-label, often at high doses (8–12 mg/kg) and in combination with a beta-lactam (e.g., ceftaroline) for persistent MRSA bacteremia or left-sided endocarditis failing standard therapy. Evidence quality: Moderate (cohort studies; IDSA guideline recommends considering high-dose daptomycin).

Bone and joint infections (MRSA): Used as part of combination therapy for MRSA osteomyelitis and prosthetic joint infections. Evidence quality: Moderate (IDSA guideline 2011; cohort studies).

Febrile neutropenia (empiric Gram-positive cover): Considered when Gram-positive cover is needed and vancomycin/linezolid are contraindicated. Evidence quality: Low (limited data).

Dose

Dosing

Adult Dosing — By Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Complicated SSTI (MRSA, MSSA, streptococci, VSE)4 mg/kg IV q24h4 mg/kg IV q24h4 mg/kg/day (FDA-approved)Duration: 7–14 days
Administer as 2-min IV push or 30-min infusion in 0.9% NaCl
S. aureus bacteremia / right-sided endocarditis6 mg/kg IV q24h6 mg/kg IV q24h6 mg/kg/day (FDA-approved)Duration: 2–6 weeks
Limited safety data beyond 28 days
Persistent MRSA bacteremia / complicated endocarditis (off-label high-dose)8–10 mg/kg IV q24h8–12 mg/kg IV q24h12 mg/kg/day (off-label)Used for salvage therapy or high-inoculum infections; often combined with ceftaroline or a beta-lactam
Monitor CPK more frequently; well-tolerated up to 12 mg/kg in Phase 1 studies
VRE bacteremia (off-label)8–12 mg/kg IV q24h8–12 mg/kg IV q24h12 mg/kg/day (off-label)Higher doses often used based on PK/PD data for enterococci
Combination with ampicillin (for E. faecalis) or ceftaroline may enhance activity
Renal impairment (CrCl <30 mL/min, HD, CAPD)4 mg/kg (cSSSI) or 6 mg/kg (bacteremia) IV q48hSame dose, q48hAs per indicationAdminister after haemodialysis on dialysis days
~15% removed by 4h HD; ~11% by 48h PD

Pediatric Dosing (1–17 Years) — cSSSI

Age GroupDoseFrequencyMaximum DoseNotes
1 to <2 years10 mg/kg IVOnce daily10 mg/kgDuration: up to 14 days; infusion over 60 minutes
Highest weight-based dose due to fastest clearance in this age group
2–6 years9 mg/kg IVOnce daily9 mg/kgDuration: up to 14 days; infusion over 60 minutes
7–11 years7 mg/kg IVOnce daily7 mg/kgDuration: up to 14 days; infusion over 30 minutes
12–17 years5 mg/kg IVOnce daily5 mg/kgDuration: up to 14 days; infusion over 30 minutes

Pediatric Dosing (1–17 Years) — S. aureus Bacteremia

Age GroupDoseFrequencyMaximum DoseNotes
1–6 years12 mg/kg IVOnce daily12 mg/kgDuration: up to 42 days; infusion over 60 minutes
Do NOT administer as 2-min IV push in pediatric patients
7–11 years9 mg/kg IVOnce daily9 mg/kgDuration: up to 42 days; infusion over 30 minutes
12–17 years7 mg/kg IVOnce daily7 mg/kgDuration: up to 42 days; infusion over 30 minutes
Clinical Pearl: High-Dose Daptomycin and Combination Therapy

The FDA-approved dose for bacteremia (6 mg/kg) was established in trials comparing daptomycin to standard of care. However, clinical experience and PK/PD data strongly support using higher doses (8–12 mg/kg) for serious infections, particularly persistent bacteremia, endocarditis, and deep-seated infections. In a Phase 1 study, daptomycin was well tolerated at doses up to 12 mg/kg daily for 14 days. Combination with beta-lactams (especially ceftaroline) has shown synergistic killing of MRSA in both in vitro and clinical data, and may prevent the emergence of daptomycin non-susceptibility. The IDSA MRSA guideline recommends considering high-dose daptomycin (10 mg/kg) with an anti-staphylococcal beta-lactam for persistent MRSA bacteremia.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Daptomycin is a cyclic lipopeptide antibiotic derived from Streptomyces roseosporus with a unique, calcium-dependent mechanism of action. In the presence of physiological calcium concentrations, daptomycin inserts its lipophilic tail into the Gram-positive bacterial cell membrane, forming oligomeric pores that cause rapid membrane depolarisation. This leads to loss of the membrane potential, cessation of DNA, RNA, and protein synthesis, and rapid cell death without lysis. Because daptomycin kills bacteria through membrane disruption rather than inhibition of a specific enzymatic pathway, its mechanism is distinct from all other antibiotic classes, and cross-resistance is rare. Daptomycin exhibits concentration-dependent bactericidal activity, with the AUC/MIC ratio being the PK/PD parameter best correlated with efficacy.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionNot orally absorbed; IV administration only; inactivated by pulmonary surfactantNo oral formulation exists; cannot be used for pneumonia regardless of pathogen susceptibility
DistributionVd ~0.1 L/kg; protein binding 90–93%; primarily distributed in plasma with limited tissue penetrationSmall Vd means drug concentrates in plasma; achieves high serum bactericidal levels; limited penetration into lung, CSF, and some deep tissues
MetabolismMinimal hepatic metabolism; not a CYP substrate, inhibitor, or inducerNegligible CYP-mediated drug interactions; no dose adjustment for hepatic impairment
Elimination~78% renal excretion (52% as unchanged drug); t½ ~8 h; ~15% removed by 4h HD; ~11% by 48h PDPrimarily renally cleared; extend dosing interval to q48h for CrCl <30 mL/min; administer after haemodialysis on dialysis days; linear PK through 6 mg/kg
SE

Side Effects

Safety data from Phase 3 cSSSI trials (n=534 daptomycin 4 mg/kg) and the Phase 3 S. aureus bacteremia/endocarditis trial (n=120 daptomycin 6 mg/kg). Adverse event profiles differ between indications due to different doses and treatment durations.

≥2%Common — cSSSI Trials (4 mg/kg)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Headache5.4%Non-specific; similar to comparator
Diarrhea5.2%Mild; distinguish from CDAD; lower risk than vancomycin
Rash4.3%Usually maculopapular; discontinue if signs of serious reaction
Abnormal LFTs3.0%Monitor hepatic function; usually transient
Elevated CPK2.8%vs 1.8% comparator; only 0.2% had symptomatic myopathy
UTI2.4%Non-specific; consider in hospitalised patients
Hypotension2.4%Monitor during infusion
Dizziness2.2%Non-specific
Dyspnoea2.1%Distinguish from eosinophilic pneumonia
≥5%Common — Bacteremia/Endocarditis Trial (6 mg/kg)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Insomnia9%May reflect underlying severity of illness
Pharyngolaryngeal pain8%Non-specific
Chest pain7%Assess for endocarditis-related vs drug-related
Edema7%Non-specific
Elevated CPK7%CPK >500 U/L in 9.2% (vs 0.9% comparator); monitor weekly
Abdominal pain6%Assess for intra-abdominal complications
Pruritus6%Distinguish from hypersensitivity reaction
Hypertension6%Monitor blood pressure
Sepsis / bacteremia5% eachMay reflect underlying disease course; serious Gram-negative infections reported in 8.3% of daptomycin-treated vs 0% comparator
SeriousSerious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Myopathy / rhabdomyolysisCPK >10× ULN: uncommon at approved doses; risk increases with higher doses and concurrent statinsDays to weeks; dose- and duration-dependentMonitor CPK weekly; discontinue if CPK >5× ULN with symptoms (myalgia, weakness) or >10× ULN without symptoms; suspend statins during therapy; symptoms resolve within 3 days and CPK normalises within 7–10 days of stopping
Eosinophilic pneumoniaRare (postmarketing reports)Usually 2–4 weeks after initiationSuspect if new fever, dyspnoea, pulmonary infiltrates, and peripheral eosinophilia develop during therapy; discontinue daptomycin immediately; corticosteroids may be needed; do not rechallenge
Anaphylaxis / hypersensitivityRare (postmarketing)Any time during therapyDiscontinue immediately; institute appropriate emergency therapy
Peripheral neuropathyUncommon (postmarketing)VariableMonitor for numbness, tingling, or burning; consider discontinuation if symptoms develop
Serious Gram-negative infections8.3% in bacteremia trial (vs 0% comparator)During or after therapyDaptomycin has no Gram-negative activity; ensure Gram-negative coverage when mixed infections are possible; monitor for superinfection
CDADUncommonDuring or up to 2 months after therapyTest for C. difficile toxin if diarrhea develops; manage per guidelines
DiscontinuationDiscontinuation Rates
cSSSI (4 mg/kg)
2.8% vs 3.0% comparator
Context: Similar to comparator; well tolerated at standard dose
Bacteremia/Endocarditis (6 mg/kg)
16.7% vs 18.1% comparator
Context: Higher discontinuation reflects severity of underlying disease (endocarditis, prolonged treatment); similar between arms
Managing CPK Elevation: The Key Monitoring Parameter

CPK elevation is the signature toxicity of daptomycin and is dose- and frequency-dependent. At the approved 4 mg/kg dose for cSSSI, clinically relevant CPK elevation occurs in approximately 2.8% of patients. At 6 mg/kg for bacteremia, CPK >500 U/L occurs in 9.2%. The critical distinction is between asymptomatic CPK elevation (which may not require discontinuation if <10× ULN) and symptomatic myopathy (muscle pain/weakness), which mandates immediate discontinuation. When CPK is monitored weekly and daptomycin is dosed at q24h intervals (not more frequently), myopathy is generally reversible. The original q12h dosing explored in early trials caused unacceptable myopathy, leading to the once-daily regimen.

Int

Drug Interactions

Daptomycin has a limited drug interaction profile because it is not metabolised by CYP450 enzymes and does not inhibit or induce them. Its primary interactions are pharmacodynamic (additive myotoxicity with statins) and analytical (false PT/INR elevation).

ModerateHMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins)
MechanismBoth daptomycin and statins can cause myopathy/rhabdomyolysis independently; additive myotoxicity risk
EffectIncreased risk of CPK elevation and symptomatic myopathy; one case of CPK elevation reported in a patient receiving daptomycin + statin in the bacteremia trial
ManagementConsider temporarily suspending statin therapy during daptomycin treatment; if concurrent use is unavoidable, monitor CPK more frequently than weekly
FDA PI
ModerateRecombinant Thromboplastin Reagents (PT/INR Assays)
MechanismDaptomycin at clinically relevant concentrations causes concentration-dependent false prolongation of PT and elevation of INR with certain recombinant thromboplastin reagents
EffectFalsely elevated PT/INR results, which may lead to inappropriate anticoagulation management
ManagementDraw PT/INR specimens at trough (just before next daptomycin dose); if PT/INR remains elevated at trough, consider alternative thromboplastin reagent or repeat with bovine thromboplastin
FDA PI
MinorWarfarin
MechanismNo pharmacokinetic interaction; daptomycin 6 mg/kg did not alter warfarin PK or pharmacodynamic INR
EffectNo significant PK or PD interaction; however, PT/INR assay artefact may confound monitoring (see above)
ManagementNo dose adjustment; draw INR at trough to avoid assay artefact
FDA PI — PK Study
MinorTobramycin
MechanismUnknown clinical interaction at clinical doses
EffectTheoretical additive nephrotoxicity; tobramycin did not significantly alter daptomycin PK in healthy subjects
ManagementMonitor renal function and CPK if concurrent use is required; the clinical interaction at therapeutic doses has not been fully characterised
FDA PI
Mon

Monitoring

  • CPK (Creatine Phosphokinase)Baseline, then weekly
    Routine
    The single most important monitoring parameter. Discontinue if CPK >5× ULN with symptoms (myalgia, weakness) or >10× ULN without symptoms. Monitor more frequently if concurrent statin, renal impairment, or prior/concomitant statin therapy. Also monitor more frequently at off-label higher doses (>6 mg/kg).
  • Renal FunctionBaseline, then weekly
    Routine
    Daptomycin is primarily renally cleared; accumulation in renal impairment increases CPK elevation risk. Extend dosing interval to q48h if CrCl drops below 30 mL/min during treatment. Rhabdomyolysis (with or without AKI) has been reported.
  • Blood CulturesEvery 48–72 hours until clearance (bacteremia)
    Routine
    Persistent or relapsing bacteremia may indicate reduced daptomycin susceptibility. Repeat susceptibility testing on any new positive culture. Consider high-dose daptomycin, combination therapy, or alternative agent if bacteremia persists >3–5 days.
  • Respiratory SymptomsThroughout treatment
    Trigger-based
    Eosinophilic pneumonia can develop (typically 2–4 weeks into therapy). Suspect if new fever, cough, dyspnoea, and infiltrates appear during treatment. Obtain CBC with differential (peripheral eosinophilia), chest imaging, and BAL if feasible. Discontinue daptomycin immediately if suspected.
  • Musculoskeletal SymptomsAt each visit / weekly
    Routine
    Ask about muscle pain, tenderness, or weakness (particularly distal extremities) at each assessment. Correlate with CPK levels.
  • PT/INRIf on concurrent anticoagulation
    Trigger-based
    Draw specimens at trough (just before next dose) to minimise the artefactual PT/INR prolongation caused by daptomycin interaction with certain recombinant thromboplastin reagents.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Known hypersensitivity to daptomycin — anaphylaxis has been reported

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Pneumonia (any cause) — daptomycin is inactivated by pulmonary surfactant; clinical trials for CAP showed higher mortality and lower cure rates with daptomycin than comparator. Do not use for pneumonia even if the pathogen is susceptible in vitro
  • Left-sided infective endocarditis — not FDA-approved; clinical trial data did not demonstrate efficacy for left-sided IE. Off-label high-dose use with combination therapy may be considered by ID specialists in salvage situations

Use with Caution

  • Renal impairment (CrCl <30 mL/min) — extend dosing interval to q48h; increased risk of CPK elevation and myopathy; decreased efficacy observed in cSSSI patients with CrCl <50 mL/min
  • Concurrent HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors — consider suspending statins during daptomycin therapy; if continued, monitor CPK more frequently
  • Pediatric patients <1 year — not recommended due to potential effects on muscular, neuromuscular, and nervous systems observed in neonatal dogs
  • Prior or concurrent drugs causing myopathy — increased baseline risk of CPK elevation; monitor closely
FDA Safety Communication Not Indicated for Pneumonia

In Phase 3 trials comparing daptomycin to ceftriaxone for community-acquired pneumonia, daptomycin-treated patients had lower cure rates and higher mortality. Daptomycin is inactivated by pulmonary surfactant, rendering it ineffective in the lung regardless of in vitro susceptibility. This contraindication applies to all forms of pneumonia, including CAP, HAP, and VAP.

FDA Safety Communication Eosinophilic Pneumonia

Postmarketing reports of eosinophilic pneumonia have been associated with daptomycin use, typically presenting 2–4 weeks after initiation. Clinicians should be alert for new-onset fever, cough, dyspnoea, and pulmonary infiltrates in any patient receiving daptomycin. Peripheral eosinophilia and BAL eosinophilia support the diagnosis. Prompt discontinuation of daptomycin and corticosteroid therapy if needed usually leads to resolution. Do not rechallenge with daptomycin.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Daptomycin is a powerful antibiotic given through a vein (IV) to treat serious skin infections and bloodstream infections caused by resistant bacteria, including MRSA. It cannot be taken by mouth. Treatment may last from one to six weeks depending on the type and severity of your infection.

How It Is Given

Daptomycin is given as an IV infusion (over 30 minutes) or as an IV push (over 2 minutes) once daily. If you are receiving treatment at home through a PICC line, a home infusion nurse will teach you or your caregiver how to administer it safely. The medication must be mixed only with normal saline (0.9% sodium chloride) — never with dextrose-containing solutions.

Muscle Pain or Weakness
Tell patientDaptomycin can occasionally cause muscle damage. Regular blood tests (CPK levels) will be performed weekly to monitor for this. Some muscle soreness may occur but is usually temporary.
Call prescriberReport any unexplained muscle pain, tenderness, cramping, or weakness immediately, especially in the arms or legs. Also report dark or cola-coloured urine, which may indicate muscle breakdown.
Breathing Problems
Tell patientA rare lung reaction (eosinophilic pneumonia) can develop during daptomycin treatment, usually after 2–4 weeks. This is not an infection but a type of inflammatory reaction.
Call prescriberReport any new or worsening shortness of breath, cough, fever, or difficulty breathing that develops while on daptomycin.
Cholesterol Medications
Tell patientIf you take a statin (cholesterol-lowering medication such as atorvastatin or rosuvastatin), your prescriber may pause it during daptomycin treatment because both medications can affect muscles.
Call prescriberIf your statin was paused, do not restart it until your prescriber confirms it is safe to do so after completing daptomycin.
Diarrhea
Tell patientMild diarrhea is common with antibiotics. However, a serious type of diarrhea caused by C. difficile bacteria can occur during or up to two months after finishing treatment.
Call prescriberReport watery or bloody diarrhea (with or without stomach cramps and fever) at any time during or after treatment. Do not take anti-diarrhea medications without consulting your prescriber first.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. Cubicin (daptomycin for injection) — Full Prescribing Information. Merck Sharp & Dohme LLC. Revised 2025. FDA Label (2025)Most current FDA label with adult and pediatric indications (cSSSI and S. aureus bacteremia), dosing tables, CPK monitoring guidance, eosinophilic pneumonia warning, and renal dose adjustment.
  2. Cubicin (daptomycin for injection) — Prescribing Information. Revised 2018. FDA Label (2018)Earlier FDA label version with detailed PK parameters, adverse reaction tables from Phase 3 trials (cSSSI n=534; bacteremia n=120), and drug interaction data.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Arbeit RD, Maki D, Tally FP, Campanaro E, Eisenstein BI. The safety and efficacy of daptomycin for the treatment of complicated skin and skin-structure infections. Clin Infect Dis. 2004;38(12):1673–1681. doi:10.1086/420818Pivotal Phase 3 trial establishing daptomycin 4 mg/kg non-inferiority to comparator for cSSSI with adverse event rates including CPK elevation (2.8%).
  2. Fowler VG Jr, Boucher HW, Corey GR, et al. Daptomycin versus standard therapy for bacteremia and endocarditis caused by Staphylococcus aureus. N Engl J Med. 2006;355(7):653–665. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa053783Landmark Phase 3 RCT establishing daptomycin 6 mg/kg non-inferiority to standard therapy (anti-staphylococcal penicillin or vancomycin + initial gentamicin) for S. aureus bacteremia including right-sided endocarditis.
Guidelines
  1. Liu C, Bayer A, Cosgrove SE, et al. Clinical practice guidelines by IDSA for the treatment of MRSA infections in adults and children. Clin Infect Dis. 2011;52(3):e18–e55. doi:10.1093/cid/ciq146IDSA MRSA guideline recommending daptomycin for MRSA bacteremia and right-sided endocarditis (6 mg/kg), with consideration of higher doses (8–10 mg/kg) for persistent bacteremia.
  2. Baddour LM, Wilson WR, Bayer AS, et al. Infective endocarditis in adults: diagnosis, antimicrobial therapy, and management of complications. Circulation. 2015;132(15):1435–1486. doi:10.1161/CIR.0000000000000296AHA/IDSA guideline for infective endocarditis positioning daptomycin as an alternative for native and prosthetic valve MRSA right-sided endocarditis.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Silverman JA, Perlmutter NG, Shapiro HM. Correlation of daptomycin bactericidal activity and membrane depolarization in Staphylococcus aureus. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2003;47(8):2538–2544. doi:10.1128/AAC.47.8.2538-2544.2003Mechanistic study demonstrating daptomycin’s calcium-dependent membrane insertion and depolarisation as the basis for its rapid bactericidal activity.
  2. Sakoulas G, Bayer AS, Pogliano J, et al. Ampicillin enhances daptomycin- and cationic host defense peptide-mediated killing of ampicillin- and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2012;56(2):838–844. doi:10.1128/AAC.05551-11Study establishing the synergistic mechanism of beta-lactam + daptomycin combination therapy against VRE and resistant enterococci.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Dvorchik BH, Brazier D, DeBruin MF, Arbeit RD. Daptomycin pharmacokinetics and safety following administration of escalating doses once daily to healthy subjects. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2003;47(4):1318–1323. doi:10.1128/AAC.47.4.1318-1323.2003Phase 1 PK study establishing linear pharmacokinetics through 6 mg/kg, half-life (~8 h), Vd (~0.1 L/kg), renal clearance, and the safety of once-daily dosing.
  2. Benvenuto M, Benziger DP, Yankelev S, Vigliani G. Pharmacokinetics and tolerability of daptomycin at doses up to 12 milligrams per kilogram of body weight once daily in healthy volunteers. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2006;50(10):3245–3249. doi:10.1128/AAC.00247-06Phase 1 dose-escalation study confirming tolerability of daptomycin up to 12 mg/kg for 14 days, supporting the use of high-dose regimens in clinical practice.
  3. Bhavnani SM, Rubino CM, Ambrose PG, Drusano GL. Daptomycin exposure and the probability of elevations in the creatine phosphokinase level: data from a randomized trial of patients with bacteremia and endocarditis. Clin Infect Dis. 2010;50(12):1568–1574. doi:10.1086/652767PK/PD analysis from the bacteremia trial linking daptomycin trough concentrations (>24.3 mg/L) to increased CPK elevation risk, informing monitoring thresholds.
  4. Kim PW, Sorbello AF, Wassel RT, et al. Eosinophilic pneumonia in patients treated with daptomycin: review of the literature and US FDA adverse event reporting system reports. Drug Saf. 2012;35(6):447–457. doi:10.2165/11597460-000000000-00000Systematic review of daptomycin-associated eosinophilic pneumonia from FAERS data establishing clinical characteristics, typical onset, and outcomes.