Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2024)

Flexible Development Programs for Antibacterial Drugs to Address Unmet Medical Needs

  • Mayurika Ghosh,
  • Dmitri Iarikov,
  • Xiaojing (Karen) Qi,
  • Daniel Rubin,
  • Simone Shurland,
  • Avery Goodwin,
  • Xiaohui Wei,
  • Dakshina Chilukuri,
  • Owen McMaster,
  • Terry Miller,
  • Peter Kim,
  • Adam Sherwat

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid3011.231416
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 11
pp. 2227 – 2230

Abstract

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The US Food and Drug Administration recognizes the unmet medical need for antibacterial drugs to treat serious bacterial diseases caused by resistant pathogens for which effective therapies are limited or lacking. The agency also recognizes that designing and conducting clinical trials to assess the safety and efficacy of drugs to treat resistant infections is challenging, especially for drugs only active against a single or a few bacterial species, and that a more flexible development program might be appropriate. In this article, we discuss several regulatory considerations for flexible development programs for antibacterial drugs intended to meet an unmet medical need. As an example, we use the recent approval of sulbactam for injection and durlobactam for injection (XACDURO) for the treatment of hospital-acquired bacterial pneumonia and ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia caused by susceptible isolates of Acinetobacter baumannii-calcoaceticus complex.

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