omadacycline has been researched along with Clostridium-Infections* in 3 studies
3 other study(ies) available for omadacycline and Clostridium-Infections
Article | Year |
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Efficacy of Omadacycline or Vancomycin Combined With Germinants for Preventing Clostridioides difficile Relapse in a Murine Model.
Clostridioides difficile infections (CDI) and recurrence (rCDI) are major health care burdens. Recurrence is likely caused by spores in the gastrointestinal tract that germinate after antibiotic therapy. This murine study explores germinant-antibiotic combinations for CDI.. Previously described murine models were evaluated using C. difficile VPI 10463. The severe model compared omadacycline versus vancomycin in survival, weight loss, clinical scoring, and C. difficile toxin production. The nonsevere model compared these antibiotics with and without germinants (solution of sodium taurocholate, taurine, sodium docusate, calcium gluconate). Additionally, colon histopathology, bile acid analysis, environmental/spore shedding, and 16S sequencing was evaluated.. In the severe model, omadacycline-treated mice had 60% survival versus 13.3% with vancomycin (hazard ratio [HR], 0.327; 95% confidence interval [CI],.126-.848; P = .015) along with decreased weight loss, and disease severity. In the nonsevere model, all mice survived with antibiotic-germinant treatment versus 60% antibiotics alone (HR, 0.109; 95% CI, .02-.410; P = .001). Omadacycline resulted in less changes in bile acids and microbiota composition. Germinant-treated mice showed no signs of rCDI, spore shedding, or significant toxin production at 15 days.. In murine models of CDI, omadacycline improved survival versus vancomycin. Germinant-antibiotic combinations were more effective at preventing rCDI compared to antibiotics alone without inducing toxin production. Topics: Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Bile Acids and Salts; Clostridioides; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Disease Models, Animal; Mice; Recurrence; Vancomycin; Weight Loss | 2023 |
Clostridioides difficile infection represents a growing clinical challenge. The new compound omadacycline is a potential treatment alternative, as many antibiotics have limited activity or are rarely used due to costs and side effects. The activity of omadacycline and five comparators was assessed with agar dilution on a 2015-to-2018 collection of 65 C. difficile isolates from Sweden. Omadacycline demonstrated Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Humans; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Ribotyping; Sweden; Tetracyclines | 2021 |
Decision Analysis: Omadacycline Relative to Moxifloxacin Among Hospitalized Community-Acquired Bacterial Pneumonia Patients at Risk of Clostridioides difficile Infection.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Omadacycline is an aminomethylcycline antibiotic approved in the USA as once-daily intravenous/oral monotherapy for adults with community-acquired bacterial pneumonia (CABP). Omadacycline demonstrated noninferiority to the fluoroquinolone moxifloxacin in a phase III CABP trial; adverse-event rates were similar between treatment groups except for Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI), which occurred in 2% of moxifloxacin-treated patients and 0% of patients on omadacycline. Conceptual healthcare-decision analytic models were developed to better understand the economic implications of antibiotic selection and CDI risk in acute-care facilities.. A conceptual healthcare-decision analytic model was created to estimate incremental costs associated with treating 100 hospitalized CABP patients with an initial 5-day inpatient regimen of omadacycline instead of moxifloxacin. The underlying model assumption was that treatment with omadacycline has the potential to reduce CDI events relative to moxifloxacin. The model included excess costs associated with each treatment group from admission through discharge. Attributable CDI cost per case in the moxifloxacin group varied from $15,000 to $45,000 (US$). Omadacycline acquisition cost was $300-600/day for 5 days.. At a CDI attributable cost per case of $30,000 (base-case analyses), the incremental treatment cost (US$) per 100 patients ranged from $300,000 to $- 120,000 (cost savings). The excess CDI incidence in moxifloxacin-treated patients would need to be 5-10% for omadacycline to be cost-saving, assuming the attributable CDI cost is approximately $30,000.. Targeted omadacycline use may reduce economic burden associated with hospitalized CABP patients treated with moxifloxacin if it can reduce excess cases of moxifloxacin-associated CDI. Topics: Administration, Intravenous; Adult; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Clostridium Infections; Community-Acquired Infections; Hospitalization; Humans; Moxifloxacin; Pneumonia, Bacterial; Tetracyclines | 2021 |