Bacterial Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Phase 3 Randomized, Double-blind, Multi-center Study to Compare the Safety and Efficacy of Omadacycline IV/PO to Linezolid IV/PO for Treating Adults With Acute Bacterial Skin and Skin Structure Infections (ABSSSI)
Verified date | March 2019 |
Source | Paratek Pharmaceuticals Inc |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of omadacycline as compared to linezolid in the treatment of adults with acute bacterial skin and skin structure infections.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 655 |
Est. completion date | May 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | April 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Patients, ages 18 years or older who have signed the informed consent - Has a qualifying skin and skin structure infection - Female patients must not be pregnant at the time of enrollment - Must agree to a reliable method of birth control during the study and for 30 days following the last dose of study drug Exclusion Criteria: - Infections where the outcome is strongly influenced by factors other than protocol-defined treatment and procedures, that require antibacterial treatment for greater than 14 days - Evidence of significant immunological disease - Severe sepsis or septic shock - Has a history of hypersensitivity or allergic reaction to any tetracycline or to linezolid - Has received an investigational drug within past 30 days - Women who are pregnant or nursing |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Bulgaria | Site 104 | Pleven | |
Bulgaria | Site 102 | Plovdiv | |
Bulgaria | Site 105 | Plovdiv | |
Bulgaria | Site 103 | Rousse | |
Bulgaria | Site 101 | Sofia | |
Croatia | Site 205 | Slavonski Brod | |
Croatia | Site 201 | Zagreb | |
Croatia | Site 202 | Zagreb | |
Croatia | Site 203 | Zagreb | |
Croatia | Site 204 | Zagreb | |
Greece | Site 207 | Athens | |
Greece | Site 211 | Athens | |
Greece | Site 208 | Thessaloniki | |
Greece | Site 209 | Thessaloniki | |
Hungary | Site 110 | Budapest | |
Hungary | Site 111 | Budapest | |
Hungary | Site 114 | Miskolc | |
Hungary | Site 113 | Szeged | |
Israel | Site 213 | Holon | |
Israel | Site 219 | Kfar-Saba | |
Israel | Site 214 | Nazareth | |
Israel | Site 216 | Safed | |
Latvia | Site 122 | Daugavpils | |
Latvia | Site 123 | Liepaja | |
Latvia | Site 124 | Rezekne | |
Latvia | Site 120 | Riga | |
Latvia | Site 121 | Riga | |
Peru | Site 234 | Cusco | |
Peru | Site 233 | Lima | |
Peru | Site 236 | Lima | |
Peru | Site 238 | Lima | |
Peru | Site 239 | Lima | |
Peru | Site 237 | Trujillo | |
Poland | Site 130 | Bydgoszcz | |
Poland | Site 133 | Katowice | |
Poland | Site 131 | Lodz | |
Poland | Site 134 | Olsztyn | |
Poland | Site 132 | Warszawa | |
Romania | Site 141 | Bucharest | |
Romania | Site 142 | Bucharest | |
Romania | Site 146 | Bucharest | |
Romania | Site 144 | Cluj-Napoca | |
Romania | Site 140 | Craiova | |
Romania | Site 143 | Târgu-Mures | |
Romania | Site 145 | Timisoara | |
South Africa | Site 241 | Benoni | Gauteng |
South Africa | Site 244 | Thabazimbi | Limpopo |
Spain | Site 221 | Barcelona | Cataluna |
Spain | Site 222 | Terrassa | Barcelona |
Turkey | Site 247 | Ankara | |
Turkey | Site 246 | Trabzon | |
Ukraine | Site 172 | Dnipropetrovsk | |
Ukraine | Site 173 | Dnipropetrovsk | |
Ukraine | Site 179 | Kharkiv | |
Ukraine | Site 171 | Kyiv | |
Ukraine | Site 170 | Lviv | |
Ukraine | Site 174 | Odesa | |
Ukraine | Site 175 | Uzhhorod | |
Ukraine | Site 178 | Vinnytsia | |
Ukraine | Site 176 | Zaporizhia | |
United States | Site 256 | Augusta | Georgia |
United States | Site 273 | Buffalo | New York |
United States | Site 266 | Butte | Montana |
United States | Site 262 | Chula Vista | California |
United States | Site 253 | Columbus | Georgia |
United States | Site 268 | Detroit | Michigan |
United States | Site 254 | La Mesa | California |
United States | Site 263 | Las Vegas | Nevada |
United States | Site 259 | Miami | Florida |
United States | Site 261 | Mobile | Alabama |
United States | Site 258 | Oceanside | California |
United States | Site 255 | Rapid City | South Dakota |
United States | Site 252 | Santa Ana | California |
United States | Site 260 | Santa Ana | California |
United States | Site 270 | Somers Point | New Jersey |
United States | Site 257 | Springfield | Massachusetts |
United States | Site 269 | Stockton | California |
United States | Site 264 | West Palm Beach | Florida |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Paratek Pharmaceuticals Inc |
United States, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Hungary, Israel, Latvia, Peru, Poland, Romania, South Africa, Spain, Turkey, Ukraine,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Number of Participants With Early Clinical Response | Early clinical response is defined as clinical success, which is categorized as survival with at least a 20% reduction of acute bacterial skin and skin structure infection (ABSSSI) primary lesion size compared to Screening measurements, without receiving any rescue antibacterial therapy. An indeterminate classification is used for a response that could not be adequately inferred because the participant was not assessed because they withdrew consent, were lost to follow-up, or other specified reason. | Screening; 48 to 72 hours after the first dose of test article | |
Secondary | Number of Participants With the Indicated Investigator Assessment of Clinical Response in the mITT Population at the Post Therapy Evaluation (PTE) Visit | At the PTE Visit the investigator indicated one of the following outcomes relating to the primary infection under study: Clinical Success: participant was alive; the infection was sufficiently resolved such that further antibacterial therapy was not needed. These participants may have had some residual changes related to infection requiring ancillary treatment. Clinical Failure was defined as meeting any of the following criteria: infection required additional treatment with alternative antibacterial therapy; participant received antibacterial therapy between the End-of-Treatment (EOT) Visit and the PTE Visit that may have been effective for the infection under study for a different infection from the one under study; unplanned major surgical intervention for the infection under study between the EOT and PTE Visits; participant died before evaluation. Indeterminate: clinical response to test article could not be adequately inferred. | Screening; 7 to 14 days after the last day of therapy | |
Secondary | Number of Participants With the Indicated Investigator Assessment of Clinical Response in the Clinically Evaluable-Post Therapy Evaluation (CE-PTE) Population | At the PTE Visit the investigator indicated one of the following outcomes relating to the primary infection under study: Clinical Success: participant was alive; the infection was sufficiently resolved such that further antibacterial therapy was not needed. These participants may have had some residual changes related to infection requiring ancillary treatment. Clinical Failure was defined as meeting any of the following criteria: infection required additional treatment with alternative antibacterial therapy; participant received antibacterial therapy between the EOT Visit and the PTE Visit that may have been effective for the infection under study for a different infection from the one under study; unplanned major surgical intervention for the infection under study between the EOT and PTE Visits; participant died before evaluation. | Screening; 7 to 14 days after the last day of therapy | |
Secondary | Number of Participants With the Indicated Type of Adverse Event (AE) | An AE is defined as any untoward, undesired, or unplanned event in the form of signs, symptoms, disease, or laboratory or physiologic observations occurring in a person given a test article or in a clinical study. The event does not need to be causally related to the test article or clinical study. A serious adverse event (SAE) is defined as an event that resulted in death, was life-threatening, required hospitalization or prolongation of an existing hospitalization, resulted in a persistent or significant disability or incapacity, resulted in cancer, or resulted in a congenital anomaly or birth defect. A treatment-emergent AE (TEAE) is defined as any AE that newly appeared, increased in frequency, or worsened in severity on or after the initiation of active test article. Vital sign measurements, electrocardiogram findings, and laboratory values classified as adverse events were included in the analysis. Data are presented as the number of participants with at least 1 of the event. | 0 to 37 days |
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