Cargando…

290. Safety and Effectiveness of Oral Sodium Fusidate (Fusidic Acid) as Chronic Antibiotic Suppressive Therapy in Patients With Staphylococcal Bone or Joint Infections

BACKGROUND: Fusidic acid (FA) is an anti-staphylococcal agent used to treat chronic bone and joint infections (BJI) due to the availability of an oral formulation and its MRSA activity. Though used widely throughout the world for decades, FA is not approved in the USA. METHODS: To evaluate the safet...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sheets, Amanda, Graham, Donald, Darouiche, Rabih, Strayer, Andrew
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6253183/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.301
_version_ 1783373438881103872
author Sheets, Amanda
Graham, Donald
Darouiche, Rabih
Strayer, Andrew
author_facet Sheets, Amanda
Graham, Donald
Darouiche, Rabih
Strayer, Andrew
author_sort Sheets, Amanda
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Fusidic acid (FA) is an anti-staphylococcal agent used to treat chronic bone and joint infections (BJI) due to the availability of an oral formulation and its MRSA activity. Though used widely throughout the world for decades, FA is not approved in the USA. METHODS: To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of FA as chronic suppressive therapy in patients with staphylococcal BJI, we enrolled 30 patients in a prospective, single-arm, multi-center study in the USA. Eligible patients had refractory infections that could not be managed surgically and/or had not responded to previous antibiotic treatment. In Part A of the study, all patients received 6 months of oral FA treatment. In the first 1–2 weeks, patients could receive a companion antibiotic. Clinical success was based on lack of need for surgery or additional antibiotics. After all patients completed Part A of the study, an interim analysis was performed. In Part B of the study (ongoing), patients who completed Part A and require continued suppressive therapy may continue to receive FA for a total of 24 months. RESULTS: Most patients (83%) had orthopedic hardware infections. Therapy was considered successful at the 6-month visit in 18 patients (60%). Microbiological persistence was observed in eight patients, with three cases of decreasing FA susceptibility (including one case of resistance). Among 29 patients who experienced a treatment-emergent adverse event (TEAE), the most frequently reported events were: urinary tract infection (n = 9), peripheral edema/swelling (n = 8), nausea/dyspepsia (n = 7). Seven patients experienced TEAEs related to study drug; mild gastrointestinal disorders were most common. Two treatment-related events (unrelated to therapeutic failure) led to discontinuation of study drug CONCLUSION: Patients with refractory BJI have few treatment options. In our study, 60% of infections were effectively suppressed for 6 months with FA treatment. The frequency of TEAEs was high, though not unexpected in this population with many chronic diseases. FA was well-tolerated with few patients experiencing treatment-related AEs leading to study drug discontinuation. FA administered chronically as monotherapy may lead to decreasing susceptibility and treatment failure in some patients; thus, combination therapy is warranted for this indication. DISCLOSURES: A. Sheets, Melinta Therapeutics: Employee, Salary. D. Graham, Cempra: Grant Investigator, Research grant. R. Darouiche, Cempra: Grant Investigator, Grant recipient. A. Strayer, Melinta Therapeutics, Inc.: Employee and Shareholder, Salary.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6253183
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-62531832018-11-28 290. Safety and Effectiveness of Oral Sodium Fusidate (Fusidic Acid) as Chronic Antibiotic Suppressive Therapy in Patients With Staphylococcal Bone or Joint Infections Sheets, Amanda Graham, Donald Darouiche, Rabih Strayer, Andrew Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: Fusidic acid (FA) is an anti-staphylococcal agent used to treat chronic bone and joint infections (BJI) due to the availability of an oral formulation and its MRSA activity. Though used widely throughout the world for decades, FA is not approved in the USA. METHODS: To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of FA as chronic suppressive therapy in patients with staphylococcal BJI, we enrolled 30 patients in a prospective, single-arm, multi-center study in the USA. Eligible patients had refractory infections that could not be managed surgically and/or had not responded to previous antibiotic treatment. In Part A of the study, all patients received 6 months of oral FA treatment. In the first 1–2 weeks, patients could receive a companion antibiotic. Clinical success was based on lack of need for surgery or additional antibiotics. After all patients completed Part A of the study, an interim analysis was performed. In Part B of the study (ongoing), patients who completed Part A and require continued suppressive therapy may continue to receive FA for a total of 24 months. RESULTS: Most patients (83%) had orthopedic hardware infections. Therapy was considered successful at the 6-month visit in 18 patients (60%). Microbiological persistence was observed in eight patients, with three cases of decreasing FA susceptibility (including one case of resistance). Among 29 patients who experienced a treatment-emergent adverse event (TEAE), the most frequently reported events were: urinary tract infection (n = 9), peripheral edema/swelling (n = 8), nausea/dyspepsia (n = 7). Seven patients experienced TEAEs related to study drug; mild gastrointestinal disorders were most common. Two treatment-related events (unrelated to therapeutic failure) led to discontinuation of study drug CONCLUSION: Patients with refractory BJI have few treatment options. In our study, 60% of infections were effectively suppressed for 6 months with FA treatment. The frequency of TEAEs was high, though not unexpected in this population with many chronic diseases. FA was well-tolerated with few patients experiencing treatment-related AEs leading to study drug discontinuation. FA administered chronically as monotherapy may lead to decreasing susceptibility and treatment failure in some patients; thus, combination therapy is warranted for this indication. DISCLOSURES: A. Sheets, Melinta Therapeutics: Employee, Salary. D. Graham, Cempra: Grant Investigator, Research grant. R. Darouiche, Cempra: Grant Investigator, Grant recipient. A. Strayer, Melinta Therapeutics, Inc.: Employee and Shareholder, Salary. Oxford University Press 2018-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6253183/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.301 Text en © The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Sheets, Amanda
Graham, Donald
Darouiche, Rabih
Strayer, Andrew
290. Safety and Effectiveness of Oral Sodium Fusidate (Fusidic Acid) as Chronic Antibiotic Suppressive Therapy in Patients With Staphylococcal Bone or Joint Infections
title 290. Safety and Effectiveness of Oral Sodium Fusidate (Fusidic Acid) as Chronic Antibiotic Suppressive Therapy in Patients With Staphylococcal Bone or Joint Infections
title_full 290. Safety and Effectiveness of Oral Sodium Fusidate (Fusidic Acid) as Chronic Antibiotic Suppressive Therapy in Patients With Staphylococcal Bone or Joint Infections
title_fullStr 290. Safety and Effectiveness of Oral Sodium Fusidate (Fusidic Acid) as Chronic Antibiotic Suppressive Therapy in Patients With Staphylococcal Bone or Joint Infections
title_full_unstemmed 290. Safety and Effectiveness of Oral Sodium Fusidate (Fusidic Acid) as Chronic Antibiotic Suppressive Therapy in Patients With Staphylococcal Bone or Joint Infections
title_short 290. Safety and Effectiveness of Oral Sodium Fusidate (Fusidic Acid) as Chronic Antibiotic Suppressive Therapy in Patients With Staphylococcal Bone or Joint Infections
title_sort 290. safety and effectiveness of oral sodium fusidate (fusidic acid) as chronic antibiotic suppressive therapy in patients with staphylococcal bone or joint infections
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6253183/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.301
work_keys_str_mv AT sheetsamanda 290safetyandeffectivenessoforalsodiumfusidatefusidicacidaschronicantibioticsuppressivetherapyinpatientswithstaphylococcalboneorjointinfections
AT grahamdonald 290safetyandeffectivenessoforalsodiumfusidatefusidicacidaschronicantibioticsuppressivetherapyinpatientswithstaphylococcalboneorjointinfections
AT darouicherabih 290safetyandeffectivenessoforalsodiumfusidatefusidicacidaschronicantibioticsuppressivetherapyinpatientswithstaphylococcalboneorjointinfections
AT strayerandrew 290safetyandeffectivenessoforalsodiumfusidatefusidicacidaschronicantibioticsuppressivetherapyinpatientswithstaphylococcalboneorjointinfections