Infectious Diseases Unit, Rabin Medical Center, Beilinson Hospital, Petah-Tikva, Israel.
Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Clin Infect Dis. 2021 Jun 1;72(11):1968-1974. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciaa457.
Infections caused by multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria are a major public health threat. We aimed to assess the data supporting US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of new agents aimed to treat MDR bacterial infections and the data provided by postmarketing studies.
We identified all drugs with in vitro activity against MDR bacteria initially approved by the FDA between January 2010 and December 2018. Characteristics of trials supporting approval and regulatory pathways were collected from Drugs@FDA. Characteristics of postmarketing studies were extracted from drug labels and ClinicalTrials.gov entries effective 1 June 2019.
Initial approval of 11 newly approved antibiotics with anti-MDR activity was supported by 20 trials, all with noninferiority design. All initially approved indications were for common infections, mostly acute bacterial skin and skin-structure infections, regardless of causative microorganism. The proportion of MDR bacteria in most trials was low (<10% for gram-negative infections, <1% for gram-positive pneumonia). Most trials (90%) excluded immunocompromised and critically ill patients. Of 16 additional postmarketing randomized controlled trials identified through ClinicalTrials.gov, only 2 exclusively included infections caused by MDR bacteria, comprising 116 patients. No drug was granted accelerated approval, which would mandate postmarketing efficacy studies.
The approval of new drugs with potential clinical activity against MDR bacteria is supported by trials evaluating infections caused by non-MDR organisms, using noninferiority design and excluding the patients most likely to require these agents. Subsequent postmarketing efficacy data against these organisms are scarce. Healthcare professionals and regulators should demand more robust data to support clinical decision making.
多重耐药(MDR)细菌引起的感染是一个主要的公共卫生威胁。我们旨在评估支持美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)批准用于治疗 MDR 细菌感染的新药物的数据,以及来自上市后研究的数据。
我们确定了自 2010 年 1 月至 2018 年 12 月期间,FDA 首次批准的所有对 MDR 细菌具有体外活性的药物。从 Drugs@FDA 收集支持批准的试验特征和监管途径。从药物标签和 2019 年 6 月 1 日生效的 ClinicalTrials.gov 条目提取上市后研究的特征。
最初批准的 11 种具有抗 MDR 活性的新型抗生素得到了 20 项试验的支持,所有试验均采用非劣效性设计。最初批准的所有适应症均为常见感染,主要为急性细菌性皮肤和皮肤结构感染,无论病原体如何。大多数试验中(90%)排除了免疫功能低下和重症患者。通过 ClinicalTrials.gov 确定了 16 项额外的上市后随机对照试验,其中只有 2 项专门包括 MDR 细菌引起的感染,涉及 116 名患者。没有一种药物获得加速批准,这将要求进行上市后疗效研究。
对具有潜在临床活性的 MDR 细菌的新药的批准是基于评估非 MDR 病原体引起的感染的试验,采用非劣效性设计并排除最需要这些药物的患者。随后针对这些病原体的上市后疗效数据很少。医疗保健专业人员和监管机构应要求提供更有力的数据以支持临床决策。