Drug Monograph

Fosfomycin

Fosfomycin tromethamine — Brand name: Monurol
Phosphonic Acid Antibacterial·Oral (single-dose sachet)
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
5.7 h (±2.8 h); prolonged to 11–50 h in renal impairment
Metabolism
Not metabolized; excreted unchanged
Protein Binding
0% (not bound to plasma proteins)
Bioavailability
37% (fasting); 30% (fed)
Volume of Distribution
136.1 L (±44.1 L)
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Phosphonic acid derivative (cell wall synthesis inhibitor)
Available Doses
Single-dose sachet: 3 g fosfomycin (as 5.631 g fosfomycin tromethamine) granules for oral solution
Route
Oral only (dissolved in water)
Renal Adjustment
No FDA dose adjustment specified; t½ prolonged 2–10× in renal impairment; urinary recovery significantly reduced
Hepatic Adjustment
None required (not hepatically metabolized)
Pregnancy
Category B; crosses placenta; use only if clearly needed
Lactation
Unknown if excreted in human milk; weigh risk vs benefit
Schedule / Legal Status
Prescription only (Rx)
Generic Available
Yes
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Uncomplicated urinary tract infection (acute cystitis) due to E. coli or E. faecalisWomen ≥18 yearsMonotherapy (single dose)FDA Approved

Fosfomycin is a unique phosphonic acid antibiotic that achieves high urinary concentrations following a single 3-gram oral dose, making it one of the most convenient treatment options for uncomplicated cystitis. The IDSA 2010 guidelines list fosfomycin as one of three first-line agents for uncomplicated cystitis (alongside nitrofurantoin and TMP-SMX), with the caveat that its microbiologic eradication rates are somewhat lower than other first-line agents. Its unique mechanism of action (MurA inhibition) means there is generally no cross-resistance with other antibiotic classes, making it valuable for ESBL-producing and multidrug-resistant uropathogens.

Fosfomycin is not indicated for pyelonephritis or perinephric abscess, as oral dosing does not achieve sufficient systemic or renal parenchymal concentrations.

Notable Off-Label Uses

Complicated or MDR UTI (ESBL-producing E. coli, VRE) — 3 g PO every 48–72 hours for 3 doses. Used when other oral options are limited by resistance. Evidence quality: Low-Moderate (retrospective data).

Chronic bacterial prostatitis — 3 g PO every 48–72 hours for multiple weeks. Fosfomycin distributes to prostate and seminal vesicles, but evidence is limited. Evidence quality: Low.

Transrectal prostate biopsy prophylaxis — 3 g PO single dose before procedure. Non-inferior or superior to fluoroquinolone prophylaxis in recent studies. Evidence quality: Moderate.

Dose

Dosing

Adult Dosing by Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Acute uncomplicated cystitis (FDA-approved)3 g PO single dose3 g (one dose)Dissolve sachet in 3–4 oz water; take immediately; can be taken with or without food
FDA PI: do not use more than one dose per episode; repeated daily doses increase AEs without improving efficacy
MDR/ESBL UTI — oral salvage therapy3 g PO once3 g PO every 48–72 h3 g q48h × 3 dosesOff-label; limited evidence for multi-dose regimens; optimal duration undefined
Expert opinion / retrospective data; not FDA-approved
Prostate biopsy prophylaxis3 g PO single dose3 g (one dose)Administered 1–3 hours before transrectal biopsy
Off-label; non-inferior to fluoroquinolone prophylaxis in RCTs

Special Populations

PopulationAdjustmentMaximum DoseDialysisNotes
Renal impairment (CrCl 7–54 mL/min)No specific FDA adjustment3 g single doset½ increases from 11 to 50 h; urinary recovery decreases from 32% to 11%; clinical efficacy may be reduced in severe impairment
ESRD / HemodialysisUse with caution3 g single doset½ = 40 h on HD; drug is dialyzableLimited data; efficacy uncertain due to markedly reduced urinary excretion
Elderly (≥65 years)No dose adjustment3 g single doseNo clinically significant differences in urinary excretion observed
Pediatric (≤12 years)Not establishedSafety and effectiveness not established in children ≤12 years
Clinical Pearl: Single Dose — One and Done

Fosfomycin is one of very few antibiotics where a single oral dose constitutes the full treatment course. The FDA PI explicitly warns against using more than one dose per episode, as repeated daily doses did not improve clinical success or microbiologic eradication but did increase adverse events. Urinary fosfomycin concentrations remain above the MIC breakpoint (≥64 mcg/mL for susceptible organisms) for approximately 24–30 hours after a single dose, and concentrations of ~10 mcg/mL persist at 72–84 hours post-dose. This sustained urinary exposure is key to its efficacy despite the short plasma half-life.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Fosfomycin exerts its bactericidal effect by irreversibly inhibiting MurA (UDP-N-acetylglucosamine enolpyruvyl transferase), the enzyme that catalyses the first committed step of bacterial peptidoglycan cell wall synthesis — the condensation of UDP-N-acetylglucosamine with phosphoenolpyruvate. This target is unique to fosfomycin and has no overlap with the mechanisms of beta-lactams, aminoglycosides, fluoroquinolones, or other antibiotic classes, which accounts for the absence of cross-resistance. Fosfomycin also reduces bacterial adherence to uroepithelial cells, an ancillary property that may contribute to clinical efficacy in urinary tract infections. The irreversible nature of its MurA inhibition, combined with the high and sustained urinary drug concentrations achieved after a standard 3-gram dose, results in bactericidal activity against susceptible uropathogens.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionRapidly absorbed as fosfomycin tromethamine, converted to free acid fosfomycin; bioavailability 37% (fasting), 30% (fed); Cmax 26.1 mcg/mL at ~2 h (fasting), 17.6 mcg/mL at ~4 h (fed); food reduces rate but not cumulative urinary excretionCan be taken with or without food for UTI treatment; cumulative urinary exposure equivalent regardless of food; food delays Tmax but does not clinically reduce efficacy
DistributionVd 136.1 L; 0% protein binding; distributes to kidneys, bladder wall, prostate, seminal vesicles; bladder tissue concentration ~18 mcg/g at 3 h post-dose; crosses placentaZero protein binding allows entire circulating drug to be pharmacologically active; high bladder/urinary concentrations support UTI efficacy; insufficient systemic levels for pyelonephritis or bloodstream infections
MetabolismNot metabolized; excreted unchanged in urine and fecesNo hepatic metabolism; no CYP450 involvement; no dose adjustment needed in hepatic impairment; minimal drug interaction potential
Elimination~38% excreted in urine, ~18% in feces; mean urinary concentration 706 mcg/mL at 2–4 h, ≥100 mcg/mL for 26 h, ~10 mcg/mL at 72–84 h; total body clearance 16.9 L/h; renal clearance 6.3 L/h; t½ 5.7 hSustained urinary concentrations well above the susceptible MIC breakpoint (≤64 mcg/mL) for 24–30 h; renal impairment significantly reduces urinary recovery (32% → 11% as CrCl drops from 54 to 7 mL/min); drug is dialyzable
SE

Side Effects

1–10%Common (Drug-Related, from Clinical Trials; N=1,233)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Diarrhea9.0%Most common drug-related AE; generally mild and self-limiting after single dose; higher than comparators (nitrofurantoin 6.4%, TMP-SMX 2.3%, ciprofloxacin 3.1%)
Vaginitis5.5%Comparable to other UTI antibiotics; may reflect flora disruption
Nausea4.1%Lower than nitrofurantoin (7.2%) and TMP-SMX (8.6%) in head-to-head trials
Headache3.9%Usually mild; resolves without intervention
Dizziness1.3%Comparable to other agents
Asthenia1.1%Self-limiting
Dyspepsia1.1%Comparable to other agents
SeriousSerious (Postmarketing Reports)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
AnaphylaxisVery rare (postmarketing)Minutes to hoursEmergency management; epinephrine; do not re-challenge
AngioedemaVery rare (postmarketing)HoursDiscontinue; supportive care; airway management if needed
Aplastic anemiaVery rare (postmarketing)VariableCBC monitoring; hematology referral if confirmed
Cholestatic jaundice / hepatic necrosisVery rare (postmarketing)VariableMonitor LFTs if symptomatic; discontinue if hepatotoxicity suspected
Toxic megacolonVery rare (postmarketing)VariableEvaluate for C. difficile; surgical consultation if needed
Asthma exacerbationVery rare (postmarketing)VariableAppropriate bronchodilator therapy
Hearing lossVery rare (postmarketing; causality not established)VariableAudiology referral if symptoms develop
DiscontinuationDiscontinuation & Tolerability
Single-Dose Regimen
N/A
Discontinuation is not applicable to a single-dose drug; overall tolerability is good with the most common complaint being diarrhea (9%)
Clinical Trial Microbiologic Eradication
82%
5–11 days post-therapy; equivalent to nitrofurantoin (76%); inferior to ciprofloxacin (98%) and TMP-SMX (98%) (FDA PI clinical studies)
Efficacy Perspective: Lower Eradication but Unique Advantages

Fosfomycin’s microbiologic eradication rate of ~82% for E. coli at 5–11 days is lower than ciprofloxacin or TMP-SMX but equivalent to nitrofurantoin. Clinical success rates are comparable across agents. Fosfomycin’s unique value lies in its single-dose convenience (maximizing adherence), its distinct mechanism (no cross-resistance), its activity against ESBL-producing organisms, and its minimal collateral damage to the microbiome compared to fluoroquinolones. The IDSA 2010 guideline endorses it as a first-line option but notes the lower efficacy data compared to some alternatives.

Int

Drug Interactions

Fosfomycin has a remarkably limited drug interaction profile, consistent with its lack of hepatic metabolism, zero protein binding, and single-dose administration. It does not inhibit or induce CYP450 enzymes and has no known pharmacodynamic interactions with commonly prescribed medications. The only clinically relevant interaction identified in the FDA label involves drugs that increase gastrointestinal motility.

ModerateMetoclopramide & Other GI Motility Agents
MechanismIncreased gastrointestinal motility reduces fosfomycin absorption time and decreases both serum concentrations and urinary excretion
EffectLower urinary fosfomycin concentrations; potential for reduced antibacterial efficacy
ManagementAvoid concurrent use with metoclopramide or other prokinetic agents when possible; if unavoidable, consider alternative UTI therapy
FDA PI
MinorCimetidine
MechanismEvaluated in PK studies
EffectNo effect on fosfomycin pharmacokinetics
ManagementNo adjustment needed; confirmed safe for concurrent use
FDA PI
Clinical Pearl: Minimal Interaction Profile

Fosfomycin’s lack of hepatic metabolism, zero protein binding, and absence of CYP450 involvement make it one of the lowest-interaction-risk antibiotics available. This is particularly valuable in elderly patients on polypharmacy or patients on warfarin, immunosuppressants, or other high-interaction-risk medications where selecting a UTI antibiotic with minimal interaction potential is clinically important.

Mon

Monitoring

  • Symptom Resolution2–3 days post-dose
    Routine
    Patients should be informed that symptoms should improve within 2–3 days. If no improvement, re-evaluate and consider alternative therapy with broader tissue distribution. Persistence or reappearance of bacteriuria is more common with fosfomycin than with multi-day antibiotic courses.
  • Urine CultureBefore and after therapy
    Routine
    Confirm susceptibility pre-treatment. Post-treatment culture recommended if symptoms persist. If bacteriuria reappears, select an alternative agent per FDA PI guidance.
  • Renal FunctionBefore initiating in patients with known impairment
    Trigger-based
    Renal impairment significantly reduces urinary fosfomycin excretion (32% → 11% as CrCl drops). Efficacy may be compromised in patients with moderate-severe renal impairment due to insufficient urinary drug levels.
  • GI SymptomsDuring and after treatment
    Routine
    Diarrhea is the most common adverse effect (9%). If watery or bloody diarrhea develops (especially >2 months post-dose), evaluate for C. difficile. Toxic megacolon has been reported in postmarketing surveillance.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Known hypersensitivity to fosfomycin tromethamine or any component of the formulation

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Severe renal impairment (CrCl <10 mL/min) — urinary drug recovery drops to ~11%, likely insufficient for therapeutic urinary concentrations; efficacy uncertain
  • Suspected pyelonephritis or upper tract infection — fosfomycin lacks adequate tissue/systemic levels for upper urinary tract disease; use an agent with broader tissue distribution
  • Complicated UTI with systemic signs — fever, flank pain, or hemodynamic instability require agents with systemic activity

Use with Caution

  • Pregnancy — Category B; no adequate controlled studies in pregnant women; use only if clearly needed. Fosfomycin crosses the placenta
  • Lactation — unknown whether excreted in human milk; caution advised
  • Moderate renal impairment — t½ significantly prolonged; urinary recovery reduced but single dose may still achieve adequate levels for uncomplicated cystitis
  • Repeated daily dosing — FDA PI explicitly states that repeated daily doses increase adverse events without improving outcomes; do not use multi-day dosing for a single cystitis episode
FDA Labeling Precaution Single-Dose Only for Acute Cystitis

The FDA prescribing information for Monurol explicitly warns against using more than one single dose to treat a single episode of acute cystitis. Repeated daily doses of fosfomycin did not improve clinical success or microbiologic eradication rates compared to single-dose therapy but did increase the incidence of adverse events. Multi-dose regimens (e.g., 3 g every 48–72 h) are used off-label for complicated or MDR infections, but this is not an FDA-approved use.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Fosfomycin is a single-dose antibiotic specifically designed to treat simple bladder infections. It works by blocking bacterial cell wall production through a mechanism that is completely different from other antibiotics. One dose is the entire treatment course for an uncomplicated urinary tract infection.

How to Take

Pour the entire contents of the sachet into 3–4 ounces (half a cup) of cold or room temperature water — do not use hot water. Stir to dissolve and drink the entire mixture immediately. Do not take the powder in its dry form. The medication can be taken with or without food.

One Dose Is the Full Course
Tell patientYou only need to take this medication once. One sachet is the complete treatment. Do not take a second dose for the same infection. The medicine continues to work in your urine for 2–3 days after you take it.
Call prescriberIf your symptoms have not improved within 2–3 days after taking the medication, contact your doctor. You may need a different antibiotic.
Diarrhea
Tell patientDiarrhea is the most common side effect, affecting about 1 in 10 people. It is usually mild and resolves on its own within a day or two since you only take one dose.
Call prescriberContact your doctor if you develop severe, watery, or bloody diarrhea, with or without stomach cramps and fever, even if it occurs weeks after taking the medication. This could indicate a serious bowel infection.
Preparation of the Medication
Tell patientNever swallow the dry powder directly. Always dissolve it in cold or room temperature water first. Stir until dissolved and drink right away. Do not save the mixed solution for later.
Call prescriberIf you vomit shortly after taking the medication, contact your prescriber to discuss whether a repeat dose or alternative treatment is needed.
Signs of a Serious Reaction
Tell patientSerious allergic reactions to fosfomycin are very rare, but you should be aware of the warning signs.
Call prescriberSeek immediate medical attention if you develop swelling of the face, lips, or throat, difficulty breathing, hives, or severe skin rash after taking the medication.
Distinguishing Bladder vs Kidney Infection
Tell patientThis medication only treats bladder infections. It does not reach your kidneys in sufficient concentrations to treat a kidney infection.
Call prescriberIf you develop high fever, chills, back or flank pain, nausea, or vomiting, seek medical attention immediately as these may indicate a kidney infection requiring different treatment.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. MONUROL (fosfomycin tromethamine) Granules for Oral Solution. Full Prescribing Information. Zambon Switzerland Ltd / Allergan USA, Inc. Rev. May 2018. FDA LabelPrimary regulatory reference for fosfomycin oral: approved indication, single-dose regimen, complete PK data, clinical trial adverse event rates (N=1,233), comparative eradication data, and contraindications.
Key Clinical Trials & Reviews
  1. Falagas ME, Vouloumanou EK, Samonis G, et al. Fosfomycin. Clin Microbiol Rev. 2016;29(2):321–347. DOIComprehensive review of fosfomycin covering mechanism, spectrum, PK/PD, clinical efficacy, and emerging role against MDR uropathogens including ESBL-producing Enterobacterales.
  2. Patel SS, Balfour JA, Bryson HM. Fosfomycin tromethamine: a review of its antibacterial activity, pharmacokinetic properties and therapeutic efficacy as a single-dose oral treatment for acute uncomplicated lower urinary tract infections. Drugs. 1997;53(4):637–656. DOIClassic drug review establishing the PK foundation and clinical efficacy data for single-dose fosfomycin in acute cystitis.
  3. Vardakas KZ, Legakis NJ, Triarides N, et al. Susceptibility of contemporary isolates to fosfomycin: a systematic review of the literature. Int J Antimicrob Agents. 2016;47(4):269–285. DOISystematic review demonstrating sustained high susceptibility rates of E. coli to fosfomycin globally, including ESBL-producing strains.
Guidelines
  1. Gupta K, Hooton TM, Naber KG, et al. International clinical practice guidelines for the treatment of acute uncomplicated cystitis and pyelonephritis in women: a 2010 update by the IDSA and ESMID. Clin Infect Dis. 2011;52(5):e103–e120. DOIIDSA guideline listing fosfomycin as one of three first-line agents for uncomplicated cystitis; notes lower bacterial efficacy compared to some alternatives but good clinical efficacy.
  2. Anger J, Lee U, Ackerman AL, et al. Recurrent uncomplicated urinary tract infections in women: AUA/CUA/SUFU guideline. J Urol. 2019;202(2):282–289. DOIAUA guideline addressing recurrent UTI management in women; discusses fosfomycin as a treatment option for acute episodes with its single-dose advantage.
  3. Tamma PD, Heil EL, Justo JA, et al. IDSA 2024 Guidance on the Treatment of Antimicrobial-Resistant Gram-Negative Infections. Clin Infect Dis. 2024;ciae403. DOIIDSA AMR guidance acknowledging fosfomycin as an option for uncomplicated ESBL-E cystitis but noting it is not suggested for pyelonephritis or complicated UTI.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Kahan FM, Kahan JS, Cassidy PJ, et al. The mechanism of action of fosfomycin (phosphonomycin). Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1974;235:364–386. DOIFoundational paper elucidating fosfomycin’s mechanism of MurA (enolpyruvyl transferase) inhibition and its role in disrupting the first step of bacterial cell wall synthesis.
  2. Silver LL. Fosfomycin: mechanism and resistance. Cold Spring Harb Perspect Med. 2017;7(2):a025262. DOIDetailed review of fosfomycin’s molecular mechanism and the biological basis for its generally low but emerging resistance patterns.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Bergan T, Thorsteinsson SB, Albini E. Pharmacokinetic profile of fosfomycin trometamol. Chemotherapy. 1993;39(5):297–301. DOIKey PK study establishing bioavailability, urinary excretion kinetics, and the pharmacologic basis for single-dose efficacy of oral fosfomycin tromethamine.
  2. Qiao LD, Zheng B, Chen S, et al. Evaluation of three-dose fosfomycin tromethamine in the treatment of patients with urinary tract infections: an uncontrolled, open-label, multicentre study. BMJ Open. 2013;3(12):e004157. DOIStudy evaluating the 3-dose (3g every other day) fosfomycin regimen for complicated UTI, providing PK and efficacy data for multi-dose off-label use.