PeptideTrace
ApprovedLipoglycopeptide AntibioticImmune & Anti-inflammatory

Telavancin (Vibativ)

A

Evidence Grade A — Regulatory approved. 461 published studies. 17 registered clinical trials.

17 trials461 studiesUSEUCA

Medically reviewed by a licensed medical professional

Licensed Indications

  • Bacterial Pneumonia
  • Hospital-Acquired Infection
  • Complicated Skin and Skin Structure Infections
  • Hospital-Acquired Bacterial Pneumonia
  • Ventilator-Associated Bacterial Pneumonia

User Experience Reports

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Overview

Telavancin (sold as Vibativ) is an intravenous antibiotic derived from vancomycin with enhanced potency, approved for complicated skin infections and hospital-acquired pneumonia caused by gram-positive bacteria including MRSA. It combines two killing mechanisms — blocking cell wall construction and disrupting the bacterial membrane — for faster bacterial killing than vancomycin alone.

Also Known As

Telavancin is also known by these brand and alternate names:

Research Activity

461studies
Human 326
Animal 29
In-vitro 138
Reviews 162

461 published studies: 326 human, 29 animal, 138 in-vitro, 162 reviews

Regulatory Status

US
FDA-approved(FDA)
EU
EMA-authorised(EMA)
CA
Health Canada approved(Health Canada)

Legal Status

USPrescription drug (Rx)
EUPrescription medicine (EU centralised authorisation)
CAPrescription drug

Summary

Telavancin is marketed as Vibativ (approved September 2009 for skin infections; June 2013 for hospital-acquired pneumonia). It is administered as a once-daily intravenous infusion.

In skin infection trials, telavancin was non-inferior to vancomycin. In hospital-acquired pneumonia, it showed a trend toward superiority in the S. aureus subgroup. However, telavancin carries a boxed warning regarding foetal risk and a risk of kidney toxicity — patients with pre-existing kidney disease (creatinine clearance below 50 mL/min) had increased mortality in clinical trials. These safety concerns, combined with the availability of other options, have limited its clinical uptake compared to daptomycin and the longer-acting lipoglycopeptides.

Mechanism of Action

Telavancin combines two killing mechanisms. Like vancomycin, it blocks cell wall construction by binding to D-Ala-D-Ala, but approximately 14 times more potently. Uniquely, its lipophilic side chain also inserts into the bacterial membrane, causing rapid depolarisation — the membrane loses its electrical charge, which is essential for the bacterium's energy production and nutrient transport. This dual attack (cell wall plus membrane) produces faster bacterial killing than vancomycin alone.

Research Summary

Phase III trials involving approximately 3,300 patients showed telavancin was non-inferior to vancomycin for skin infections and showed a trend toward superiority in pneumonia caused by S. aureus. However, a three-component boxed warning has significantly limited its use: increased mortality in patients with pre-existing kidney disease, direct kidney toxicity, and risk of harm to unborn babies. These safety concerns, combined with the availability of other effective options (daptomycin, dalbavancin, oritavancin), have relegated telavancin to a niche role — typically reserved for gram-positive infections where other options have failed or are not suitable. It also interferes with coagulation blood tests and causes a distinctive metallic or soapy taste. No paediatric data are available.

Clinical Trials

PeptideTrace tracks 17 registered clinical trials for Telavancin sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov.

NCT06119061Phase IVRecruiting

Telavancin Blood and Cerebrospinal Fluid Concentrations in Patients With External Ventricular Drainage

Aaron CookEndpoint: Determine the CNS penetration of telavancin in critically ill patients with External Ventricular DrainageCompletion: 2026-12-01
NCT03172793Phase IVCompleted

Telavancin Pharmacokinetics in Cystic Fibrosis Patients

Joseph L. Kuti, PharmDEndpoint: Telavancin ClearanceCompletion: 2019-04-17
NCT02753855Phase ICompleted

Pharmacokinetics of Telavancin in Normal and Obese Subjects

University of Illinois at ChicagoEndpoint: Number (%) of adverse events of any severity regardless of relationship to study drugCompletion: 2016-10-01
NCT02392208Phase IVCompleted

Effect of Dialysis on the Pharmacokinetics of Telavancin in Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease Stage 5

University of MichiganEndpoint: Cmax of TelavancinCompletion: 2016-03-01
NCT02013141Phase ITerminated

Telavancin Pediatric PK Study (Ages >12 Months to 17 Years)

Cumberland PharmaceuticalsEndpoint: Pharmacokinetics- Area Under the Curve Extrapolated to Infinity for the Plasma Concentration Versus Time Curves for TelavancinCompletion: 2021-03-01
View all 17 trials on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Regulatory Timeline

2009
Regulatory

FDA ORIG 1

2011
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 2

2011
Regulatory

EMA Marketing Authorisation

2013
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 4

2013
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 6

2013
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 3

2013
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 8

2014
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 7

2014
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 9

2014
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 10

2014
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 11

2016
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 13

2016
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 12

2017
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 14

2020
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 15

2020
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 16

Scientific Detail

Overview (Scientific)

Telavancin is a semisynthetic lipoglycopeptide from vancomycin, heptapeptide core, MW 1,755.6 Da. Decylaminoethyl side chain (membrane interaction) and (phosphonomethyl)aminomethyl group at AA7 (renal excretion). ~14-fold greater potency than vancomycin. IV 10 mg/kg once daily over 60 min. Half-life 7-9 hours. Protein binding ~90-93%.

Mechanism of Action (Scientific)

Dual mechanism. First: binds D-Ala-D-Ala termini blocking transglycosylation and transpeptidation - ~14-fold more potent than vancomycin (IC50 0.14 vs. 2.0 microM in MRSA). Second: decylaminoethyl moiety interacts with bacterial lipid bilayer causing rapid membrane depolarization and permeability increase, leaking ATP and K+. Produces concentration-dependent bactericidal activity.

Summary (Scientific)

Marketed as Vibativ. Approved September 11, 2009 (cSSSI) and June 21, 2013 (HABP/VABP). ATLAS 1&2 (cSSSI; N=1,794): 88.3% vs. 87.1%. ATTAIN 1&2 (HABP/VABP; N=1,503): 58.9% vs. 59.5%; S. aureus subgroup superior 84.2% vs. 74.3% (P=0.035). Increased mortality with CrCl <=50 mL/min. Indications: cSSSI; HABP/VABP caused by S. aureus when alternatives unsuitable.

Related Compounds

Vancomycin

Approved
Glycopeptide Antibiotic

Vancomycin is marketed as Vancocin and Firvanq (approved 1958, with oral solution Firvanq approved 2018). It is the standard treatment for serious MRSA infections (bloodstream infections, endocarditis, pneumonia, bone infections) and is first-line for severe C. difficile colitis. Vancomycin requires therapeutic drug monitoring — blood levels must be checked regularly to ensure the dose is effective without causing kidney damage or hearing loss. The rise of vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) and occasional vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus (VISA) strains represent ongoing challenges. Despite being nearly 70 years old, vancomycin remains irreplaceable for many serious infections, though newer alternatives like daptomycin and the lipoglycopeptides offer advantages in specific settings.

Zilucoplan

Approved
Complement C5 Inhibitor (Peptide)

Zilucoplan is marketed as Zilbrysq (approved October 2023) for anti-acetylcholine receptor antibody-positive generalised myasthenia gravis in adults. Administered as a daily subcutaneous self-injection. In the RAISE trial, zilucoplan showed statistically significant improvements in both activities of daily living and quantitative muscle strength scores compared to placebo, with improvements evident from week one. Its key differentiator from existing complement inhibitors (eculizumab, ravulizumab) is the self-injectable format — those alternatives require hospital-based intravenous infusions. As with all complement inhibitors, patients require meningococcal vaccination before starting treatment due to increased susceptibility to meningococcal infection.

Daptomycin

Approved
Lipopeptide Antibiotic

Daptomycin is marketed as Cubicin (approved September 2003). It is indicated for complicated skin and soft tissue infections and S. aureus bloodstream infections including right-sided endocarditis. Administered as a once-daily intravenous infusion. A key limitation is that daptomycin cannot be used for pneumonia — lung surfactant inactivates the drug. In the bacteraemia trial, daptomycin was non-inferior to vancomycin with significantly lower rates of kidney problems (11% versus 26%). Creatine kinase (CK) levels must be monitored during treatment, as daptomycin can cause muscle toxicity. Generics became available after patent expiry, significantly reducing cost.

Related Research

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making decisions about your health.