Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative Releases Recommendations to Enhance the Feasibility of Developing New Antibacterial Drugs

Today, CTTI released two new sets of recommendations designed to advance clinical trials for an important and particularly challenging area of antibacterial drug development: hospital-acquired and ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia (HABP/VABP). This work is part of CTTI’s antibacterial drug development program, which includes a suite of projects tackling specific issues to improve clinical trials and bolster the pipeline for new antibacterial drugs.

CTTI’s new recommendations outline innovative approaches to designing clinical trials for HABP/VABP, including early enrollment strategies and the streamlined collection of safety data. CTTI convened multi-stakeholder teams to analyze the challenges associated with HABP/VABP trials and develop the proposed solutions. The feasibility of these new approaches will be tested in an upcoming pilot study, the findings of which are expected to help drive the adoption of streamlined practices for antibacterial drug development across the clinical trial enterprise.

“The CTTI project teams’ work is the type of science that can benefit the overall field of antibacterial drug development by advancing the science of clinical trials for hospital-acquired and ventilator acquired pneumonia,” said Edward M. Cox, M.D., M.P.H., Director of the Office of Antimicrobial Products from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “We look forward to continued progress of the CTTI effort and the results from additional studies that will evaluate proposed solutions to these challenges.”

CTTI’s latest recommendations appear as part of a peer-reviewed supplement in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases that features collaborative and innovative approaches by CTTI and others to address this pressing public health concern and speed new treatments to patients.

“This supplement from Clinical Infectious Diseases is really impressive and broad, highlighting many of the problems within antimicrobial resistance, from how to improve the development of new drugs, to engaging with the private sector. I am delighted to see such a prestigious scientific journal engage with this issue in a holistic approach looking at policy as well as scientific actions that need to be taken” said Jim O’Neill, Chair of the AMR Review.

Antibacterial resistance is an international public health crisis, and new treatment options are urgently needed. HABP/VABP occurs in seriously ill patients and is associated with high rates of antibiotic resistance and mortality. Multiple comorbidities, the rapid time course of acute illness, and other factors make conducting clinical trials in this population especially complex. “As someone whose susceptibility to multiple infections and Pneumonias has plagued me for six decades, these recommendations signal a transformational breakthrough,” said Stephen Mikita, patient advocate.

On August 24, CTTI will host a public webinar on this topic: Antibacterial Drug Development in a Time of Great Need: Global Expert Panel.

CTTI Presents on Patient & Provider Attitudes on Streamlined Antibacterial Drug Development at ATS 2016

Resistance to available antibiotics is increasing. Despite the critical need for novel antibacterial therapies, their development is lagging. At the 2016 American Thoracic Society (ATS) International Conference, Deborah Collyar, a project team member for CTTI’s Unmet Need in Antibiotic Development Project, will present results from interviews and focus groups on patient and provider attitudes toward using streamlined approaches for antibacterial drug development. These findings will be used to develop recommendations to improve the uptake and appropriate use of antibacterial therapies that are developed through streamlined approaches to address the critical unmet need for novel antibacterial therapies.

View the poster abstract.

If you are attending the conference, please stop by to learn more:

ATS 2016 International Conference Conference
Location: San Francisco, California
Poster: Streamlining Antibacterial Drug Development Programs to Address Unmet Medical Need: Patient and Provider Attitudes on a Modified Benefit-Risk Calculus
Date & Time: Sunday, May 15, 2016, from 9:00 AM-4:15 PM PT
Presenter: Deborah Collyar

 

Now Available: Poster on Cost Drivers of HABP/VABP Phase 3 Clinical Trials

On October 9, 2015, results from CTTI’s Streamlining HABP/VABP Trials Project were presented in the poster session, Cost Drivers of Hospital Acquired Bacterial Pneumonia and Ventilator Associated Bacterial Pneumonia (HABP/VABP) Phase Three Clinical Trials, at ID Week 2015 in San Diego, CA. This poster explores the drivers of HABP/VABP direct and indirect clinical trial costs and identifies opportunities to lower these costs.

We are pleased to share this poster on our website.