| Literature DB >> 30270406 |
Richard G Wunderink1, Evangelos J Giamarellos-Bourboulis2, Galia Rahav3, Amy J Mathers4, Matteo Bassetti5, Jose Vazquez6, Oliver A Cornely7, Joseph Solomkin8, Tanaya Bhowmick9, Jihad Bishara10, George L Daikos11, Tim Felton12, Maria Jose Lopez Furst13, Eun Jeong Kwak14, Francesco Menichetti15, Ilana Oren16, Elizabeth L Alexander17, David Griffith18, Olga Lomovskaya18, Jeffery Loutit18, Shu Zhang17, Michael N Dudley18, Keith S Kaye19.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Treatment options for carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) infections are limited and CRE infections remain associated with high clinical failure and mortality rates, particularly in vulnerable patient populations. A Phase 3, multinational, open-label, randomized controlled trial (TANGO II) was conducted from 2014 to 2017 to evaluate the efficacy/safety of meropenem-vaborbactam monotherapy versus best available therapy (BAT) for CRE.Entities:
Keywords: Best available therapy; Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae; Meropenem–vaborbactam; Randomized clinical trial; TANGO II
Year: 2018 PMID: 30270406 PMCID: PMC6249182 DOI: 10.1007/s40121-018-0214-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Ther ISSN: 2193-6382
Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics (mCRE-MITT)
| Characteristic | M–V ( | BAT ( | Total ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, mean (SD), years | 63.5 (14.1) | 60.2 (13.0) | 62.5 (13.7) |
| Age cohort, | |||
| < 65 y | 17 (53.1) | 9 (60.0) | 26 (55.3) |
| ≥ 65 y | 8 (25.0) | 3 (20.0) | 11 (23.4) |
| ≥ 75 y | 7 (21.9) | 3 (20.0) | 10 (21.3) |
| Female gender, | 18 (56.3) | 5 (33.3) | 23 (48.9) |
| White race, | 28 (87.5) | 12 (80.0) | 40 (85.1) |
| Region, | |||
| North America | 7 (21.9) | 7 (46.7) | 14 (29.8) |
| Europe | 19 (59.4) | 8 (53.3) | 27 (57.4) |
| Rest of Worlda | 6 (18.8) | 0 (0) | 6 (12.8) |
| BMI, mean (SD) | 27.9 (9.0) | 25.8 (7.6) | 27.2 (8.5) |
| Infection type, | |||
| Bacteremia | 14 (43.8) | 8 (53.3) | 22 (46.8) |
| cUTI/AP | 12 (37.5) | 4 (26.7) | 16 (34.0) |
| HABP/VABP | 4 (12.5) | 1 (6.7) | 5 (10.6) |
| cIAI | 2 (6.3) | 2 (13.3) | 4 (8.5) |
| Baseline pathogen, | |||
| | 29 (90.6) | 12 (80.0) | 41 (87.2) |
| | 3 (9.4) | 1 (6.7) | 4 (8.5) |
| | 1 (3.1) | 2 (13.3) | 3 (6.4) |
| | 0 (0) | 2 (13.3) | 2 (4.3) |
| | 1 (3.1) | 1 (6.7) | 2 (4.3) |
| Enrolled as confirmed CRE, | 23 (71.9) | 14 (93.3) | 37 (78.7) |
| Enrolled as suspected CRE, | 9 (28.1) | 1 (6.7) | 10 (21.3) |
| Creatinine clearance, mL/min, | |||
| ≥ 50 | 24 (75.0) | 9 (60.0) | 33 (70.2) |
| 30–49 | 4 (12.5) | 2 (13.3) | 6 (12.8) |
| 20–29 | 1 (3.1) | 2 (13.3) | 3 (6.4) |
| < 20 | 2 (6.3) | 0 (0) | 2 (4.3) |
| Missing | 1 (3.1) | 2 (13.3) | 3 (6.4) |
| Charlson comorbidity index, | |||
| ≤ 2 | 4 (12.5) | 1 (6.7) | 5 (10.6) |
| 3–4 | 3 (9.4) | 2 (13.4) | 5 (10.6) |
| 5 | 11 (34.4) | 1 (6.7) | 12 (25.5) |
| ≥ 6 | 14 (43.8) | 11 (73.3) | 25 (53.2) |
| Diabetes mellitus, | 12 (37.5) | 7 (46.7) | 19 (40.4) |
| SIRS, | 15 (46.9) | 6 (40.0) | 21 (44.7) |
| ICU admission, | 5 (15.6) | 3 (20.0) | 8 (17.0) |
| Immunocompromisedc, | 11 (34.4) | 8 (53.3) | 19 (40.4) |
| Prior antibiotic failured, | 9 (28.1) | 0 (0) | 9 (19.1) |
BAT best available therapy, BMI body mass index, cIAI complicated intra-abdominal infection, CRE carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, cUTI/AP complicated urinary tract infection/acute pyelonephritis, HABP/VABP hospital-acquired bacterial pneumonia/ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia, ICU intensive care unit, mCRE-MITT microbiologic carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae modified intent to treat, M–V meropenem–vaborbactam, SD standard deviation, SIRS systemic inflammatory response syndrome
aIsrael, Latin America (Colombia, Brazil, Argentina)
bBaseline pathogens listed occurred in 2 or more patients
cReceipt of immunosuppressive medications or bone marrow ablative chemotherapy, underlying lymphoma or leukemia (not in remission), previous transplantation, splenectomy, or presence of neutropenia
dClinical evidence of prior antimicrobial failure as ascertained by the study investigator at screening and randomization
Fig. 1Flow of patients in TANGO II. mCRE-MITT microbiologic-carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae-modified intent-to-treat, MITT modified intent-to-treat, m-MITT microbiologic modified intent-to-treat; M–V meropenem–vaborbactam, VABP ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia. aBest available therapy included (alone or in combination): a carbapenem, aminoglycoside, polymyxin B, colistin, tigecycline, or (monotherapy only) ceftazidime-avibactam
Efficacy endpoints among all patients with confirmed CRE infections (mCRE-MITT)
| M–V ( | BAT ( | Differencea (95% CI) | Relative differenceb | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Efficacy endpoints | |||||
| Clinical cure at EOT | 21 (65.6) | 5 (33.3) | 32.3 (3.3–61.3) | 0.03 | 97.0 |
| Clinical cure at TOC | 19 (59.4) | 4 (26.7) | 32.7 (4.6–60.8) | 0.02 | 122.5 |
| Microbiologic curec at EOT | 21 (65.6) | 6 (40.0) | 25.6 (− 4.1 to 55.4) | 0.09 | 64.0 |
| Microbiologic curec at TOC | 17 (53.1) | 5 (33.3) | 19.8 (− 9.7 to 49.3) | 0.19 | 59.5 |
| Day-28 mortality | 5 (15.6) | 5 (33.3) | − 17.7 (− 44.7 to 9.3) | 0.20 | − 53.2 |
AE adverse event, BAT best available therapy, CI confidence interval, cUTI/AP complicated urinary tract infection/acute pyelonephritis, EOT end of treatment, mCRE-MITT microbiologic carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae modified intent to treat, M–V meropenem–vaborbactam, TOC test of cure
aData represent the difference in percentages for meropenem–vaborbactam and BAT (95% CI for that difference)
bData represent (difference in percentage for meropenem–vaborbactam and BAT)/BAT
cComposite of either microbiologic eradication or presumed eradication at respective visit
dPatients assessed as having prior antibiotic failure at randomization (meropenem–vaborbactam, 9; BAT, 0) were excluded from this analysis
eComposite outcome of either Day-28 all-cause mortality or a post-baseline increase in serum creatinine ≥ 1.0 mg/dL
fComposite outcome of either clinical failure at test of cure or a post-baseline increase in serum creatinine ≥ 1.0 mg/dL
gComposite outcome of either Day-28 all-cause mortality or adverse event of renal failure, renal failure acute or renal impairment
hComposite outcome of either clinical failure at test of cure or adverse event of renal failure, renal failure acute or renal impairment
Fig. 2Subgroup analysis. mCRE-MITT microbiologic carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae modified intent-to-treat, SIRS systemic inflammatory response syndrome
Adverse events and safety endpoints (safety population)
| Adverse events | M–V ( | BAT ( | Total ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| TEAEs | |||
| Anya | 42 (84.0) | 23 (92.0) | 65 (86.7) |
| Diarrhea | 6 (12.0) | 4 (16.0) | 10 (13.3) |
| Anemia | 5 (10.0) | 3 (12.0) | 8 (10.7) |
| Hypokalemia | 5 (10.0) | 2 (8.0) | 7 (9.3) |
| Hypotension | 4 (8.0) | 3 (12.0) | 7 (9.3) |
| Sepsis | 2 (4.0) | 5 (20.0) | 7 (9.3) |
| Septic shock | 1 (2.0) | 4 (16.0) | 5 (6.7) |
| Renal failure acute | 1 (2.0) | 4 (16.0) | 4 (5.3) |
| Drug-related | 12 (24.0) | 11 (44.0) | 23 (30.7) |
| TEAEs by maximum severity | |||
| Mild | 11 (22.0) | 4 (16.0) | 15 (20.0) |
| Moderate | 11 (22.0) | 5 (20.0) | 16 (21.3) |
| Severe | 7 (14.0) | 7 (28.0) | 14 (18.7) |
| Life-threatening | 3 (6.0) | 1 (4.0) | 4 (5.3) |
| Death | 10 (20.0) | 6 (24.0) | 16 (21.3) |
| SAEs | |||
| All | 17 (34.0) | 11 (44.0) | 28 (37.3) |
| Drug-related | 0 (0) | 2 (8.0) | 2 (2.7) |
| Study drug discontinuations due to TEAEs | 5 (10.0) | 3 (12.0) | 8 (10.7) |
| Study discontinuations due to TEAEs | 8 (16.0) | 5 (20.0) | 13 (17.3) |
| Renal-related safety endpoints | |||
| Renal-related TEAEs (Preferred Term) | 2 (4.0) | 6 (24.0) | 8 (10.7) |
| Renal failure acute | 1 (2.0) | 3 (12.0) | 4 (5.3) |
| Renal impairment | 1 (2.0) | 2 (8.0) | 3 (4.0) |
| Renal failure | 0 (0) | 1 (4.0) | 1 (1.3) |
| Any post-baseline RIFLE Criteriab | 1 (2.1) | 2 (8.3) | 3 (4.2) |
| Maximum post-baseline creatinine increase | |||
| ≥ 0.5 mg/dL | 7 (14.0) | 6 (24.0) | 13 (17.3) |
AE adverse event, BAT best available therapy, M–V meropenem–vaborbactam, RIFLE risk, injury, failure, loss, or end-stage, SAE serious adverse event, TEAE treatment-emergent adverse event
aTEAEs occurring in a frequency of ≥ 10% in either treatment arm
bValues at baseline or some post-baseline visit were missing for 2 M–V patients and 1 BAT patient