| Literature DB >> 31918579 |
Kamal Hamed1, Marc Engelhardt1, Mark E Jones1, Mikael Saulay1, Thomas L Holland2, Harald Seifert3,4, Vance G Fowler2.
Abstract
Although Staphylococcus aureus is a common cause of bacteremia, treatment options are limited. The need for new therapies is particularly urgent for methicillin-resistant S. aureus bacteremia (SAB). Ceftobiprole is an advanced-generation, broad-spectrum cephalosporin with activity against both methicillin-susceptible and -resistant S. aureus. This is a Phase III, randomized, double-blind, active-controlled, parallel-group, multicenter, two-part study to establish the efficacy and safety of ceftobiprole compared with daptomycin in the treatment of SAB, including infective endocarditis. Anticipated enrollment is 390 hospitalized adult patients, aged ≥18 years, with confirmed or suspected complicated SAB. The primary end point is overall success rate. Target completion of the study is in the second half of 2021. Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT03138733.Entities:
Keywords: Phase III; Staphylococcus aureus; bacteremia; ceftobiprole; daptomycin; double-blind; infective endocarditis; noninferiority; protocol; randomized
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31918579 PMCID: PMC7046132 DOI: 10.2217/fmb-2019-0332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Future Microbiol ISSN: 1746-0913 Impact factor: 3.165
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for enrollment in Part 1.
| 1. Male or female aged ≥18 years. |
| 2. Provision of informed consent. |
| 3. SAB, based on ≥1 positive blood culture: identified by culture laboratory report; or positive diagnostic test for |
| 4. At least one of the following signs or symptoms of bacteremia: |
| 5. Required duration of study antibacterial treatment ≤28 days. |
| 6. SAB in patients undergoing chronic intermittent hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis. |
| 7. Persistent SAB with documented failure of bloodstream clearance, defined as a positive blood culture for |
| 8. Other forms of complicated SAB, including:
|
| 9. Definitive native-valve right-sided IE by Modified Duke Criteria [ |
| • Treatment with a potentially effective antistaphylococcal systemic antibacterial treatment for >48 h within 7 days before randomization |
Inclusion criteria 1–7 must be ascertained based on assessments within the 72 h screening window. For inclusion criteria 8 and 9, assessments performed up to 7 days before randomization may be used to confirm the diagnosis of complicated SAB.
May be based on measurements obtained before or after informed consent, but within 72 h prior to randomization.
Or >38.5°C/101.3°F measured tympanically, >37.5°C/99.5°F measured by axillary method, or >39°C/102.2°F measured rectally.
Patients randomized with suspected complicated SAB who turn out not to meet one of these four criteria will be considered to have uncomplicated SAB, and will continue in the study.
Diagnosis must be based on radiological signs assessed using contrast-enhanced (preferred) or noncontrast-enhanced CT, or x-ray for those unable to undergo a CT scan.
An exception to this criterion will be made for patients with documented failure of bloodstream clearance, defined as a positive blood culture for S. aureus within the 72 h prior to randomization after prior appropriate antistaphylococcal treatment (except failure under daptomycin therapy) administered for at least 3 complete days.
CD4: Cluster of differentiation 4; CT: Computerized tomography; IE: Infective endocarditis; MIC: Minimum inhibitory concentration; SAB: S. aureus bacteremia; ULN: Upper limit of normal.
Figure 1.Study design.
†Patients in Part 1 (N = 80) will receive active treatment for 21–28 days. For Part 2, maximum duration of therapy may be extended to 42 days, pending the outcome of the interim safety analysis and implementation of a protocol amendment.
‡Patients in the ceftobiprole group with Gram-negative infections receive placebo to maintain blinding.
§EOT visit to be conducted within 72 h of last study-drug administration.
EOT: End of treatment; IE: Infective endocarditis; PTE: Post-treatment evaluation; R: Randomization; SAB: Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia.
Study drug administration.
| Study day | Duration of infusion | Normal renal function to mild renal impairment (CLCr ≥50 ml/min) | Renal impairment (nondialysis) | Intermittent hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Days 1–8 | 2 h intravenous infusion | 500 mg q6h | CLCr 30 – <50 ml/min: 500 mg q8h
| 250 mg q24h |
| Day 9 onwards | 2 h intravenous infusion | 500 mg q8h | CLCr 30 – <50 ml/min: 500 mg q12h
| 250 mg q24h |
| Day 1 onwards | 0.5 h intravenous infusion | 6 mg/kg q24h | 6 mg/kg q48h | 6 mg/kg q48h |
Blinded aztreonam (with daptomycin) or placebo (with ceftobiprole) may be used for coverage of Gram-negative infections.
In accordance with institutional standards, an increase in the dose of daptomycin (up to 10 mg/kg) may be implemented.
CLCr: Creatinine clearance (based on the Cockcroft–Gault formula); q6/8/12/24/48h: Every 6/8/12/24/48 h.
Study end points.
| Primary end point (overall success) criteria | Secondary end points |
|---|---|
| • All-cause mortality at day 70 (±5 days) in the mITT population
| |
| • Patient alive at day 70 (±5 days) postrandomization
| |
| • Premature discontinuation of study treatment due to lack of efficacy (as judged by the CEC committee), or for adverse events representing disease progression or relapse
|
Foci identified from day 8 onwards are considered to be new foci.
CE: Clinically evaluable; CEC: Clinical events classification; EOT: End-of-treatment; mITT: Modified intent-to-treat; PK: Pharmacokinetic; PTE: Post-treatment evaluation.
SAB: S. aureus bacteremia.
Figure 2.Random effects meta-analysis of clinical outcome (all-cause mortality) in untreated patients with
Seven original articles [36–42] were identified that described outcomes in case series of SAB in patients who did not receive antibacterial treatments. These studies were included in a random effects meta-analysis, which suggests an all-cause mortality of 76%. The lower bound of the 95% CI for this mortality estimate is 0.71, suggesting a conservative estimate of 71% mortality for patients with SAB who did not receive antibacterial treatment.
CIs were calculated using the Clopper Pearson formula.
SAB: Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia.
Figure 3.Random effects meta-analysis of clinical outcome (all-cause mortality) in patients with
Three original articles [8,43,44] were identified that described outcomes of SAB patients treated with antibacterial treatment in randomized controlled trials published since 1985. These studies were included in a random effects meta-analysis, which suggests an all-cause mortality of 16%. The upper bound of the 95% CI for this mortality estimate is 0.20, suggesting a conservative estimate of 20% mortality for patients with SAB who receive antibacterial treatment.
CIs were calculated using the Clopper Pearson formula.
SAB: S. aureus bacteremia.