Popis: |
Background Tedizolid phosphate has activity against gram-positive pathogens, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, and was approved for the treatment of ABSSSI in adults in 2014. This study compared the safety and efficacy of TZD with protocol-specified, active comparators for the treatment of ABSSSI in adolescents. Methods This was a randomized, assessor-blind, global, multicenter, phase 3 study of TZD vs. active comparator for the treatment of gram-positive ABSSSI in adolescents (aged 12 to < 18 years; NCT02276482). Enrolled patients were stratified by region and randomized 3:1 to TZD 200 mg (IV and/or oral) once daily for 6 days or investigator-selected active comparator per local standard of care (IV vancomycin, linezolid, clindamycin, flucloxacillin, or cefazolin, and/or oral linezolid, clindamycin, flucloxacillin, or cephalexin) for 10 days. The primary endpoint was safety. The percentages of patients with treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were documented; secondary efficacy endpoints included the blinded investigator’s assessment of clinical success at a test of cure visit (18–25 days after start of dosing) and early clinical response (≥20% reduction from baseline lesion area) at 48–72 h. No hypothesis testing was planned for the treatment groups. Results Of the 121 patients enrolled, 120 were treated (TZD, N = 91; comparator, N = 29). Median (range) age was 15 (12–17) years. Most patients were male (62.5%), white (86.7%), and enrolled in Europe (78.3%). Infections included major cutaneous abscess (42.5%), cellulitis/erysipelas (40.0%), and infected wound (17.5%). At baseline, the median (range) lesion surface area was 82.1 (14–978) cm2. Of those with gram-positive cultures (n = 64), S. aureus was most frequently isolated (n = 55 [85.9%]) with 3 isolates (4.7%) being methicillin resistant. TZD was well tolerated, and TEAEs were balanced between treatment arms (TZD, 14.3%; comparator, 10.3%). A total of 3 (3.3%) patients in the TZD group and 1 (3.4%) in the comparator group experienced a single-drug-related TEAE. Clinical success rates were high and similar between treatment groups (table). Conclusion TZD demonstrated comparable safety and efficacy to comparator in the treatment of ABSSSI in adolescents. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures. |