A Randomized, Double-Blind, Phase 3 Safety and Efficacy Study of Ridinilazole Versus Vancomycin for Treatment of Clostridioides difficile Infection: Clinical Outcomes With Microbiome and Metabolome Correlates of Response

Author:

Okhuysen Pablo C1,Ramesh Mayur S2,Louie Thomas3,Kiknadze Nino4,Torre-Cisneros Julian5ORCID,de Oliveira Claudia Murta6,Van Steenkiste Christophe78,Stychneuskaya Alena9,Garey Kevin W10,Garcia-Diaz Julia11,Li Jianling12,Duperchy Esther12,Chang Betty Y12,Sukbuntherng Juthamas12,Montoya Jose G1213ORCID,Styles Lori12,Clow Fong12,James Danelle12,Dubberke Erik R14,Wilcox Mark15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Infectious Diseases, Infection Control, and Employee Heatlh, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center , Houston, Texas , USA

2. Henry Ford Health , Detroit, Michigan , USA

3. Foothills Medical Center and University of Calgary , Calgary , Canada

4. Aversi Clinic , Tbilisi, Georgia

5. Reina Sofia University Hospital-IMIBIC, University of Córdoba, CIBERINFEC , Cordoba , Spain

6. Santa Casa de Belo Horizonte , Belo Horizonte , Brazil

7. Algemeen Ziekenhuis Maria Middelares , Ghent , Belgium

8. University Antwerp , Antwerp , Belgium

9. Vitebsk Regional Clinical Hospital of Infectious Diseases , Vitebsk , Belarus

10. University of Houston College of Pharmacy , Houston, Texas , USA

11. Ochsner Health , New Orleans, Louisiana , USA

12. Summit Therapeutics , Menlo Park, California , USA

13. Dr. Jack S. Remington Laboratory for Specialty Diagnostics, Palo Alto Medical Foundation , Palo Alto, California , USA

14. Washington University School of Medicine , St.Louis, Missouri , USA

15. Leeds Teaching Hospitals and University of Leeds, School of Medicine , Leeds , United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract Background Exposure to antibiotics predisposes to dysbiosis and Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) that can be severe, recurrent (rCDI), and life-threatening. Nonselective drugs that treat CDI and perpetuate dysbiosis are associated with rCDI, in part due to loss of microbiome-derived secondary bile acid (SBA) production. Ridinilazole is a highly selective drug designed to treat CDI and prevent rCDI. Methods In this phase 3 superiority trial, adults with CDI, confirmed with a stool toxin test, were randomized to receive 10 days of ridinilazole (200 mg twice daily) or vancomycin (125 mg 4 times daily). The primary endpoint was sustained clinical response (SCR), defined as clinical response and no rCDI through 30 days after end of treatment. Secondary endpoints included rCDI and change in relative abundance of SBAs. Results Ridinilazole and vancomycin achieved an SCR rate of 73% versus 70.7%, respectively, a treatment difference of 2.2% (95% CI: −4.2%, 8.6%). Ridinilazole resulted in a 53% reduction in recurrence compared with vancomycin (8.1% vs 17.3%; 95% CI: −14.1%, −4.5%; P = .0002). Subgroup analyses revealed consistent ridinilazole benefit for reduction in rCDI across subgroups. Ridinilazole preserved microbiota diversity, increased SBAs, and did not increase the resistome. Conversely, vancomycin worsened CDI-associated dysbiosis, decreased SBAs, increased Proteobacteria abundance (∼3.5-fold), and increased the resistome. Conclusions Although ridinilazole did not meet superiority in SCR, ridinilazole greatly reduced rCDI and preserved microbiome diversity and SBAs compared with vancomycin. These findings suggest that treatment of CDI with ridinilazole results in an earlier recovery of gut microbiome health. Clinical Trials Registration.Ri-CoDIFy 1 and 2: NCT03595553 and NCT03595566.

Funder

Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response

Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority

Summit, Inc

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)

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