학술논문

Design of Two Phase III, Randomized, Multicenter Studies Comparing Gepotidacin with Nitrofurantoin for the Treatment of Uncomplicated Urinary Tract Infection in Female Participants.
Document Type
Article
Source
Infectious Diseases & Therapy. Dec2022, Vol. 11 Issue 6, p2297-2310. 14p.
Subject
*URINARY tract infections
*CLINICAL trials
*NITROFURANTOIN
*COMMUNITY-acquired infections
*DNA
*COLONY-forming units assay
*DRUG resistance in bacteria
Language
ISSN
2193-8229
Abstract
Background: Uncomplicated urinary tract infections (uUTIs) are among the most common community-acquired infections for women worldwide. Treatment options are increasingly limited by antibiotic resistance; novel oral antibiotics are urgently needed. Gepotidacin is a novel, bactericidal, first-in-class triazaacenaphthylene antibiotic that inhibits bacterial deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) replication by a distinct mechanism of action, which confers activity against most strains of target pathogens, such as Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus saprophyticus, including those resistant to current antibiotics. Here, we describe the designs of two near-identical phase III clinical trials (EAGLE-2 and EAGLE-3) evaluating gepotidacin for the treatment of uUTI. Methods: These are phase III, randomized, multicenter, parallel-group, double-blind, double-dummy, comparator-controlled, noninferiority studies, comparing the efficacy and safety of gepotidacin to nitrofurantoin in the treatment of uUTI. Eligible participants are women aged ≥ 12 years with ≥ 2 uUTI symptoms, randomized (1:1) to receive oral gepotidacin (1500 mg) plus placebo or nitrofurantoin (100 mg) plus placebo, twice daily for 5 days. The primary therapeutic endpoint is composite clinical and microbiological efficacy, with noninferiority comparisons made in individuals with a qualifying (≥ 105 colony-forming units/mL urine) nitrofurantoin-susceptible uropathogen. Results: These trials were designed in accordance with US Food and Drug Administration (2019) and European Medicines Agency (2018) guidance, particularly the composite endpoint and microbiological evaluability requirements. Across the trials ~ 5000 participants are planned to be enrolled from > 200 centers globally. Conclusions: Gepotidacin represents an important potential treatment option being evaluated to address the need for novel oral antibiotics to treat uUTI. These trials are registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (https://clinicaltrials.gov/) where the full protocols can be accessed under trial IDs: NCT04020341 (EAGLE-2) and NCT04187144 (EAGLE-3). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]