Abstract
Despite progress in antimicrobial drug development, a critical need persists for new, feasible pathways to develop antibacterial agents to treat people infected with drug-resistant bacteria. Infections due to resistant gram-negative bacilli continue to cause unacceptable morbidity and mortality rates. Antibacterial agents have been historically studied in noninferiority clinical trials that focus on a single site of infection (eg, complicated urinary tract infections, intra-abdominal infections), yet these designs may not be optimal, and often are not feasible, for study of infections caused by drug-resistant bacteria. Over the past several years, multiple stakeholders have worked to develop consensus regarding paths forward with a goal of facilitating timely conduct of antimicrobial development. Here we advocate for a novel and pragmatic approach and, toward this end, present feasible trial designs for antibacterial agents that could enable conduct of narrow-spectrum, organism-specific clinical trials and ultimately approval of critically needed new antibacterial agents.
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Boucher, H. W., Ambrose, P. G., Chambers, H. F., Ebright, R. H., Jezek, A., Murray, B. E., … Rex, J. H. (2017). White paper: Developing antimicrobial drugs for resistant pathogens, narrow-spectrum indications, and unmet needs. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 216(2), 228–236. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jix211
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