How many digits of precision do you need? You are only using 4 digits in your example. If this is medical and there for real world, you can only measure most things in the real world to 10-13 digits of accuracy and double has up to 16 digits of accuracy.
System.out.println(Math.pow(11.11, -1.54));
prints
0.024524510581710988
If you use a library from this book http://www.apropos-logic.com/nc/, you can get
int runs = 10000;
long start = System.nanoTime();
double x1 = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < runs; i++)
x1 = Math.pow(11.11, -1.54);
long time = System.nanoTime() - start;
System.out.println(x1 + " took " + time / runs / 1e3 + " us avg.");
long start2 = System.nanoTime();
BigDecimal x2 = null;
for (int i = 0; i < runs; i++)
x2 = exp(ln(BigDecimal.valueOf(11.11), 20).multiply(BigDecimal.valueOf(-1.54)), 20);
long time2 = System.nanoTime() - start2;
System.out.println(x2 + " took " + time2 / runs / 1e3 + " us avg.");
prints (us for micro-seconds)
0.024524510581710988 took 0.478 us avg.
0.02452451058171098739 took 603.769 us avg.
with 40 digits of precision
0.0245245105817109873886495555036930857940 took 1409 us avg.
which may still be fast enough on your device.
I haven't included the code, partly because its very long. I am impressed how fast it is. ;)