ridinilazole and Clostridium-Infections

ridinilazole has been researched along with Clostridium-Infections* in 15 studies

Reviews

6 review(s) available for ridinilazole and Clostridium-Infections

ArticleYear
Ridinilazole: a novel, narrow-spectrum antimicrobial agent targeting Clostridium (Clostridioides) difficile.
    Letters in applied microbiology, 2022, Volume: 75, Issue:3

    Clostridium (Clostridioides) difficile infection (CDI) remains an urgent threat to patients in health systems worldwide. Recurrent CDI occurs in up to 30% of cases due to sustained dysbiosis of the gut microbiota which normally protects against CDI. Associated costs of initial and recurrent episodes of CDI impose heavy financial burdens on health systems. Vancomycin and metronidazole have been the mainstay of therapy for CDI for many years; however, these agents continue to cause significant disruption to the gut microbiota and thus carry a high risk of recurrence for CDI patients. Treatment regimens are now turning towards novel narrow spectrum antimicrobial agents which target C. difficile while conserving the commensal gut microbiota, thus significantly reducing risk of recurrence. One such agent, fidaxomicin, has been in therapeutic use for several years and is now recommended as a first-line treatment for CDI, as it is superior to vancomycin in reducing risk of recurrence. Another narrow spectrum agent, ridnilazole, was recently developed and is undergoing evaluation of its potential clinical utility. This review aimed to summarize experimental reports of ridinilazole and assess its potential as a first-line agent for treatment of CDI. Reported results from in vitro assessments, and from hamster models of CDI, show potent activity against C. difficile, non-inferiority to vancomycin for clinical cure and non-susceptibility among most gut commensal bacteria. Phase I and II clinical trials have been completed with ridinilazole showing high tolerability and efficacy in treatment of CDI, and superiority over vancomycin in reducing recurrence of CDI within 30 days of treatment completion. Phase III trials are currently underway, the results of which may prove its potential to reduce recurrent CDI and lessen the heavy health and financial burden C. difficile imposes on patients and healthcare systems.

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Anti-Infective Agents; Benzimidazoles; Clostridioides; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium; Clostridium Infections; Fidaxomicin; Humans; Metronidazole; Pyridines; Vancomycin

2022
Symmetric bis-benzimidazoles as DNA minor groove-binding agents with anti-tumour and antibacterial activity, and the evolution of the drug ridinilazole for the treatment of Clostridium difficile infections.
    Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 2022, 03-15, Volume: 58

    We report the synthesis of a range of symmetrical bis-benzimidazoles (BBZ) which possess anticancer and antibacterial activities. One of these BBZs has specific activity against Clostridium difficile and is currently in a phase 3 clinical evaluation as the drug ridinilazole. X-ray and computer modelling studies showed that BBZs typically exhibit high specificity for oligonucleotide sequences that occur in the minor groove of DNA.

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antineoplastic Agents; Benzimidazoles; Cell Proliferation; Cell Survival; Clostridium Infections; Crystallography, X-Ray; DNA; Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor; Humans; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Models, Molecular; Molecular Structure; Pyridines

2022
Ridinilazole for the treatment of Clostridioides difficile infection.
    Expert opinion on investigational drugs, 2019, Volume: 28, Issue:4

    Ridinilazole is a novel antibiotic being developed for the treatment of Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI). Ridinilazole has completed two phase II trials and phase III trials which are denoted Ri-CoDIFy 1 and 2, are planned (ClinicalTrials.gov identifiers: NCT03595553 and NCT03595566). Areas covered: This article covers the chemistry, mechanism of action, in vitro microbiology versus C. difficile and host microbiota, pre-clinical and clinical efficacy, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and safety and tolerability of ridinilazole. Expert opinion: Ridinilazole is a novel antibiotic with ideal properties for the treatment of CDI. Given the promising results from the phase II clinical trial, ridinilazole may have the capability to lower the risk for CDI recurrence thus improving sustained clinical response rates - a current unmet medical need. Assuming a positive phase III trial, ridinilazole will enter a market with heightened awareness on the importance of prevention of CDI. This along with further research into the economic consequences and decreased patient quality of life associated with recurrent CDI, should provide clinicians with further evidence for the need for therapy that limits CDI recurrence and improves sustained clinical cure.

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Benzimidazoles; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Humans; Pyridines; Quality of Life

2019
Novel antibiotics in development to treat Clostridium difficile infection.
    Current opinion in gastroenterology, 2017, Volume: 33, Issue:1

    Clostridium difficile infections (CDI) remain a challenge to treat clinically due primarily to limited number of antibiotics available and unacceptably high recurrence rates. Because of this, there has been significant demand for creating innovative therapeutics, which has resulted in the development of several novel antibiotics.. This review updates seven different antibiotics that are currently in development to treat CDI including fidaxomicin, surotomycin, ridinilazole, ramoplanin, cadazolid, LFF571, and CRS3123. Available preclinical and clinical data are compared between these antibiotics.. Many of these new antibiotics display almost ideal properties for antibiotics directed against CDI. Despite these properties, not all clinical development of these compounds has been successful. These studies have provided key insights into the pathogenesis of CDI and will continue to inform future drug development. Successful phase III clinical trials should result in several new and novel antibiotics to treat CDI.

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Benzimidazoles; Benzopyrans; Clinical Trials as Topic; Clostridium Infections; Depsipeptides; Humans; Lipopeptides; Oxazolidinones; Peptides, Cyclic; Pyridines; Thiazoles; Thiophenes

2017
Ridinilazole: a novel therapy for Clostridium difficile infection.
    International journal of antimicrobial agents, 2016, Volume: 48, Issue:2

    Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is the leading cause of infectious healthcare-associated diarrhoea. Recurrent CDI increases disease morbidity and mortality, posing a high burden to patients and a growing economic burden to the healthcare system. Thus, there exists a significant unmet and increasing medical need for new therapies for CDI. This review aims to provide a concise summary of CDI in general and a specific update on ridinilazole (formerly SMT19969), a novel antibacterial currently under development for the treatment of CDI. Owing to its highly targeted spectrum of activity and ability to spare the normal gut microbiota, ridinilazole provides significant advantages over metronidazole and vancomycin, the mainstay antibiotics for CDI. Ridinilazole is bactericidal against C. difficile and exhibits a prolonged post-antibiotic effect. Furthermore, treatment with ridinilazole results in decreased toxin production. A phase 1 trial demonstrated that oral ridinilazole is well tolerated and specifically targets clostridia whilst sparing other faecal bacteria. Phase 2 and 3 trials will hopefully further our understanding of the clinical utility of ridinilazole for the treatment of CDI.

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Benzimidazoles; Clinical Trials, Phase I as Topic; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Diarrhea; Humans; Microbial Viability; Pyridines

2016
New and emerging therapies for Clostridium difficile infection.
    Current opinion in infectious diseases, 2016, Volume: 29, Issue:6

    Clostridium difficile infection has attained high prominence given its prevalence and impacts on patients and healthcare institutions. Multiple new approaches to the prevention and treatment of C. difficile infection (CDI) are undergoing clinical trials.. Bezlotoxumab is a monoclonal antibody against toxin B that has successfully completed phase III studies, demonstrating a significant reduction in recurrent CDI when given with standard of care antibiotics. Antibiotics under development include cadazolid and ridinilazole, whereas surotomycin has had disappointing phase III results. Multiple live biotherapeutics are being developed, including freeze thawed and encapsulated versions of faecal microbiota transplantation to improve the practicality of treating patients with recurrent CDI. Alternatives to faecal microbiota transplantation, that aim to improve safety, including a microbial suspension, RBX2660, and a complex spore formulation, SER-109, have progressed to phase II studies. A nontoxigenic C. difficile strain has also shown promise to prevent recurrent CDI. In addition, three C. difficile vaccines have progressed to phase II/III clinical trials.. The diverse approaches to treating and preventing CDI offer substantial promise that new treatment options will soon emerge, particular ones that reduce the risk of recurrences.

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antibodies, Monoclonal; Antibodies, Neutralizing; Benzimidazoles; Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Fecal Microbiota Transplantation; Humans; Lipopeptides; Oxazolidinones; Peptides, Cyclic; Pyridines; Recurrence; Secondary Prevention

2016

Trials

3 trial(s) available for ridinilazole and Clostridium-Infections

ArticleYear
Antimicrobial susceptibility and ribotypes of Clostridium difficile isolates from a Phase 2 clinical trial of ridinilazole (SMT19969) and vancomycin.
    The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy, 2018, 08-01, Volume: 73, Issue:8

    We evaluated the antimicrobial susceptibility and ribotypes of Clostridium difficile isolates from participants in a Phase 2 study of ridinilazole, a novel targeted-spectrum agent for treatment of C. difficile infection.. Participants received ridinilazole (200 mg twice daily) or vancomycin (125 mg four times daily) for 10 days (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02092935). The MICs of ridinilazole and comparators for C. difficile isolates from stool samples were determined by agar dilution. Toxin gene profiling was performed by multiplex PCR and ribotype identification by capillary electrophoresis.. Eighty-nine isolates were recovered from 88/100 participants (one participant had two strains at baseline). The median colony count (cfu/g stool) was 1.9 × 104 (range: 2.5 × 102-7.0 × 106). Twelve participants (three received ridinilazole and nine received vancomycin) experienced recurrence, confirmed by immunoassays for free toxin in stool samples. The ribotype of eight out of nine isolates obtained at recurrence matched those of the initial isolates. All isolates, including those obtained at recurrence, were susceptible to ridinilazole within the expected range [median (range) MIC: 0.12 (0.06-0.5) mg/L]. The median (range) vancomycin MIC was 1 (0.5-4.0) mg/L. At baseline, 13.6% and 13.3% of samples in the ridinilazole and vancomycin groups were positive for VRE, increasing to 23.7% and 29.7% by day 40, respectively. Common ribotypes included 014-20 (14 isolates), 027 (13), 106 (7), 002 (7), 078-126 (4), 001 (4), 087 (3) and 198 (3). Toxin gene profiling of nearly all baseline isolates (98.9%) revealed a binary toxin gene (cdtA/cdtB) prevalence of 35%.. Ridinilazole potently inhibited recovered C. difficile isolates. Recurrence was not associated with altered susceptibility.

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Benzimidazoles; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Double-Blind Method; Genes, Bacterial; Humans; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Pyridines; Ribotyping; Vancomycin

2018
Enhanced preservation of the human intestinal microbiota by ridinilazole, a novel Clostridium difficile-targeting antibacterial, compared to vancomycin.
    PloS one, 2018, Volume: 13, Issue:8

    Ridinilazole, a novel targeted antibacterial being developed for the treatment of C. difficile infection (CDI) and prevention of recurrence, was shown in a recent Phase 2 study to be superior to vancomycin with regard to the primary efficacy measure, sustained clinical response (SCR), with the superiority being driven primarily by marked reductions in the rates of CDI recurrence within 30 days. Tolerability of ridinilazole was comparable to that of vancomycin. The current nested cohort study compared the effects of ridinilazole and vancomycin on fecal microbiota during and after treatment among participants in the Phase 2 study. Changes in the microbiota were assessed using qPCR and high-throughput sequencing on participants' stools collected at multiple time-points (baseline [Day 1], Day 5, end-of-treatment [EOT; Day 10], Day 25, end-of-study [EOS; Day 40], and at CDI recurrence). qPCR analyses showed profound losses of Bacteroides, C. coccoides, C. leptum, and Prevotella groups at EOT with vancomycin treatment, while ridinilazole-treated participants had a modest decrease in C. leptum group levels at EOT, with levels recovering by Day 25. Vancomycin-treated participants had a significant increase in the Enterobacteriaceae group, with this increase persisting beyond EOT. At EOT, alpha diversity decreased with both antibiotics, though to a significantly lesser extent with ridinilazole (p <0.0001). Beta diversity analysis showed a significantly larger weighted Unifrac distance from baseline-to-EOT with vancomycin. Taxonomically, ridinilazole had a markedly narrower impact, with modest reductions in relative abundance in Firmicutes taxa. Microbiota composition returned to baseline sooner with ridinilazole than with vancomycin. Vancomycin treatment resulted in microbiome-wide changes, with significant reductions in relative abundances of Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, Actinobacteria, and a profound increase in abundance of Proteobacteria. These findings demonstrate that ridinilazole is significantly less disruptive to microbiota than vancomycin, which may contribute to the reduced CDI recurrence observed in the Phase 2 study.

    Topics: Actinobacteria; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Benzimidazoles; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Cohort Studies; Discriminant Analysis; DNA, Bacterial; Feces; Firmicutes; Gastrointestinal Microbiome; Humans; Principal Component Analysis; Proteobacteria; Pyridines; Vancomycin

2018
A randomised phase 1 study to investigate safety, pharmacokinetics and impact on gut microbiota following single and multiple oral doses in healthy male subjects of SMT19969, a novel agent for Clostridium difficile infections.
    BMC infectious diseases, 2015, Feb-25, Volume: 15

    Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is a leading cause of diarrhoea in health care settings with symptoms ranging from mild and self-limiting to life threatening. SMT19969 is a novel, non-absorbable antibiotic currently under development for the treatment of CDI. Here we report the results from a Phase I study.. A double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study assessing safety and tolerability of single and multiple oral doses of SMT19969 in healthy volunteers. Pharmacokinetic assessments included blood and faecal sampling. The effect of food on systemic exposure and analysis of the gut microbiota were also included.. Fifty-six healthy male subjects were enrolled. Following single oral doses of up to 2,000 mg in the fasted state, plasma concentrations of SMT19969 were generally below the lower limit of quantification. In the fed state levels ranged from 0.102 to 0.296 ng/mL after single dosing and after repeat dosing at Day 10 from 0.105 to 0.305 ng/mL. Following single and multiple oral doses of SMT19969, mean daily faecal concentrations increased with increasing dose level and were significantly above the typical MIC range for C. difficile (0.06-0.5 μg/mL). At 200 mg BID, mean (± SD) faecal concentrations of 1,466 (±547) μg/g and 1,364 (±446) μg/g were determined on days 5 and 10 of dosing respectively. No notable metabolites were detected in faeces. Overall, all doses of SMT19969 were well tolerated both as single oral doses or BID oral doses for 10 days. The majority (88%) of adverse events (AEs) were classified as gastrointestinal disorders and were mild in severity, resolving without treatment. The gut microbiota was analysed in the multiple dose groups with minimal changes observed in the bacterial groups analysed except for total clostridia which were reduced to below the limit of detection by day 4 of dosing.. Oral administration of SMT19969 was considered safe and well tolerated and was associated with negligible plasma concentrations after single and multiple doses. In addition, minimal disruption of normal gut microbiota was noted, confirming the highly selective spectrum of the compound. These results support the further clinical development of SMT19969 as an oral therapy for CDI.. Current Controlled Trials. ISRCTN10858225 .

    Topics: Administration, Oral; Adolescent; Adult; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Benzimidazoles; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Diarrhea; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Double-Blind Method; Humans; Intestines; Male; Microbiota; Middle Aged; Pyridines; Young Adult

2015

Other Studies

6 other study(ies) available for ridinilazole and Clostridium-Infections

ArticleYear
The Novel DNA Binding Mechanism of Ridinilazole, a Precision
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2023, 05-17, Volume: 67, Issue:5

    Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) causes substantial morbidity and mortality worldwide with limited antibiotic treatment options. Ridinilazole is a precision bisbenzimidazole antibiotic being developed to treat CDI and reduce unacceptably high rates of infection recurrence in patients. Although in late clinical development, the precise mechanism of action by which ridinilazole elicits its bactericidal activity has remained elusive. Here, we present conclusive biochemical and structural data to demonstrate that ridinilazole has a primary DNA binding mechanism, with a co-complex structure confirming binding to the DNA minor groove. Additional RNA-seq data indicated early pleiotropic changes to transcription, with broad effects on multiple C. difficile compartments and significant effects on energy generation pathways particularly. DNA binding and genomic localization was confirmed through confocal microscopy utilizing the intrinsic fluorescence of ridinilazole upon DNA binding. As such, ridinilazole has the potential to be the first antibiotic approved with a DNA minor groove binding mechanism of action.

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Humans; Pyridines

2023
Evaluation of the antimicrobial activity of ridinilazole and six comparators against Chinese, Japanese and South Korean strains of Clostridioides difficile.
    The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy, 2021, 03-12, Volume: 76, Issue:4

    Clostridioides difficile is the most common cause of antimicrobial-associated diarrhoea in high-income countries. Fluoroquinolone resistance enabled the emergence and intercontinental spread of the epidemic ribotype (RT) 027 strain of C. difficile in the early 2000s. Despite frequent inappropriate antimicrobial use in Asia, RT 027 is rarely isolated in the region, but the often fluoroquinolone- and clindamycin-resistant RT 017 strain predominates.. This study evaluated the antimicrobial activity of ridinilazole, a novel antimicrobial agent with highly specific activity for C. difficile, against clinical strains of C. difficile from Asia.. C. difficile strains from Japan (n = 64), South Korea (n = 32) and China (n = 44) were tested by the agar dilution method for susceptibility to ridinilazole, metronidazole, vancomycin, clindamycin, moxifloxacin, rifaximin and fidaxomicin.. All strains were susceptible to ridinilazole, with low MICs (0.03-0.25 mg/L). Several strains showed multiresistance profiles, particularly RT 017 (100% clindamycin resistant, 91.3% moxifloxacin resistant, 82.6% rifaximin resistant) and RT 369 (94.4% clindamycin resistant, 100% moxifloxacin resistant). Rifaximin resistance was absent in all strains from Japan. Multiresistance to clindamycin, moxifloxacin and rifaximin was found in 19 RT 017 strains (from China and South Korea), 2 RT 001 strains (South Korea) and 1 RT 046 strain (South Korea).. Ridinilazole showed potent activity against a range of Asian C. difficile strains, which otherwise frequently displayed resistance to several comparator antimicrobial agents. Ongoing surveillance of antimicrobial resistance profiles is required to monitor and control the spread of resistant strains.

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Anti-Infective Agents; Asia; Benzimidazoles; China; Clostridioides; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Humans; Japan; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Pyridines; Republic of Korea; Ribotyping

2021
Update on Clostridium difficile from the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (ECCMID), Vienna, Austria, April 22-25, 2017.
    The Journal of hospital infection, 2018, Volume: 98, Issue:1

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Benzimidazoles; Biological Therapy; Clinical Trials as Topic; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Cross Infection; Disease Transmission, Infectious; Epidemiological Monitoring; Europe; Hospital Costs; Humans; Infection Control; Pyridines; Recurrence; Ribotyping; Survival Analysis; Treatment Outcome

2018
Susceptibility of Clostridium difficile Isolates of Varying Antimicrobial Resistance Phenotypes to SMT19969 and 11 Comparators.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2016, Volume: 60, Issue:1

    We determined the in vitro activity of SMT19969 and 11 comparators, including metronidazole, vancomycin, and fidaxomicin, against 107 C. difficile isolates of different antimicrobial resistance phenotypes. Fidaxomicin and SMT19969 were the most active. The fidaxomicin and SMT19969 geometric mean MICs were highest in ribotypes known to show multiple resistance. Coresistance to linezolid and moxifloxacin was evident in ribotypes 001, 017, 027, and 356. The high-level ceftriaxone resistance in ribotypes 356 and 018 was location linked.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Benzimidazoles; Ceftriaxone; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial; Fidaxomicin; Fluoroquinolones; Humans; Linezolid; Metronidazole; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Moxifloxacin; Phenotype; Pyridines; Ribotyping; Vancomycin

2016
SMT19969 for Clostridium difficile infection (CDI): in vivo efficacy compared with fidaxomicin and vancomycin in the hamster model of CDI.
    The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy, 2015, Volume: 70, Issue:6

    SMT19969 is a novel narrow-spectrum antimicrobial under development for the treatment of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI). The objectives were to assess the relative efficacies of SMT19969, vancomycin and fidaxomicin in the hamster model of CDI.. Hamsters were infected with either C. difficile BI1 (ribotype 027) or C. difficile 630 (ribotype 012) prior to treatment with vehicle, SMT19969, fidaxomicin or vancomycin for 5 days. Animals were further monitored through to day 28 and survival recorded. Plasma and gastrointestinal concentrations of SMT19969 following single and repeat administration in infected hamsters were determined.. Following infection with C. difficile BI1, treatment with SMT19969, vancomycin and fidaxomicin resulted in 100% survival during the 5 day dosing period, with 90%-100% of animals receiving SMT19969 and fidaxomicin surviving during the post-dosing follow-up period. Whilst protective during treatment, onset of mortality was observed on day 11 in animals treated with vancomycin, with a 10% survival recorded by day 28. Similar results were observed for SMT19969 and vancomycin following infection with C. difficile 630, with day 28 survival rates of 80%-100% and 0%, respectively. Fidaxomicin protected animals infected with C. difficile 630 from mortality during dosing, although day 28 survival rates varied from 0% to 40% depending on dose. Plasma levels of SMT19969 were typically below the limit of quantification, but levels in the gastrointestinal tract remained far in excess of the MIC.. These data show that SMT19969 is highly effective at treating both acute infection and preventing recurrent disease and support continued investigation of SMT19969 as a potential therapy for CDI.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Benzimidazoles; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Disease Models, Animal; Fidaxomicin; Gastrointestinal Tract; Mesocricetus; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Plasma; Pyridines; Recurrence; Survival Analysis; Treatment Outcome; Vancomycin

2015
In vitro susceptibility of Clostridium difficile to SMT19969 and comparators, as well as the killing kinetics and post-antibiotic effects of SMT19969 and comparators against C. difficile.
    The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy, 2015, Volume: 70, Issue:6

    SMT19969 is a novel antimicrobial under clinical development for the treatment of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI). The objective was to determine the comparative susceptibility of 82 C. difficile clinical isolates (which included ribotype 027 isolates and isolates with reduced metronidazole susceptibility) to SMT19969, fidaxomicin, vancomycin and metronidazole and to determine the killing kinetics and post-antibiotic effects of SMT19969, fidaxomicin and vancomycin against C. difficile.. MICs were determined by agar incorporation. Killing kinetics and post-antibiotic effects were determined against C. difficile BI1, 630 and 5325 (ribotypes 027, 012 and 078, respectively).. SMT19969 showed potent inhibition of C. difficile (MIC90=0.125 mg/L) and was markedly more active than either metronidazole (MIC90 = 8 mg/L) or vancomycin (MIC90 = 2 mg/L). There were no differences in susceptibility to SMT19969 between different ribotypes. Fidaxomicin was typically one doubling dilution more active than SMT19969 and both agents maintained activity against isolates with reduced susceptibility to metronidazole. In addition, SMT19969 was bactericidal against the C. difficile strains tested, with reductions in viable counts to below the limit of detection by 24 h post-inoculation. Vancomycin was bacteriostatic against all three strains. Fidaxomicin was bactericidal although reduced killing was observed at concentrations <20 × MIC against C. difficile BI1 (ribotype 027) compared with other strains tested.. These data demonstrate that SMT19969 is associated with potent and bactericidal activity against the strains tested and support further investigation of SMT19969 as potential therapy for CDI.

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Benzimidazoles; Clostridioides difficile; Clostridium Infections; Humans; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Microbial Viability; Pyridines

2015