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Afabicin, a First-in-Class Antistaphylococcal Antibiotic, in the Treatment of Acute Bacterial Skin and Skin Structure Infections: Clinical Noninferiority to Vancomycin/Linezolid

Frederick Wittke, Catherine Vincent, James Chen, Barry Heller, Heidi Kabler, J. Scott Overcash, François Leylavergne, Guennaëlle Dieppois

2020Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy57 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Clinical response rates at 48 to 72 h postrandomization in the mITT population were comparable among treatment groups (94.6%, 90.1%, and 91.1%, respectively). Both LD and HD afabicin were noninferior to vancomycin/linezolid (differences, -3.5% [95% confidence interval {CI}, -10.8%, 3.9%] and 1.0% [95% CI, -7.3%, 9.2%], respectively). Most common treatment-emergent adverse events were mild and were headache (9.1% and 16.8%) and nausea (6.4% and 8.4%) with LD and HD afabicin, respectively. Afabicin was efficacious and well tolerated in the treatment of ABSSSI due to staphylococci, and these data support further development of afabicin for the treatment of ABSSSI and potentially other types of staphylococcal infections. (This study has been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under identifier NCT02426918.).

Topics & Concepts

LinezolidTolerabilityVancomycinMedicineMethicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureusAntibioticsInternal medicineStaphylococcus aureusAdverse effectPopulationGastroenterologyPharmacologyMicrobiologyBiologyBacteriaGeneticsEnvironmental healthAntimicrobial Resistance in StaphylococcusStreptococcal Infections and TreatmentsAntibiotic Use and Resistance
Afabicin, a First-in-Class Antistaphylococcal Antibiotic, in the Treatment of Acute Bacterial Skin and Skin Structure Infections: Clinical Noninferiority to Vancomycin/Linezolid | Litcius