Gepotidacin is efficacious in a nonhuman primate model of pneumonic plague

Author:

Jakielaszek Charles1ORCID,Hossain Mohammad1ORCID,Qian Lian1ORCID,Fishman Cindy1ORCID,Widdowson Katherine1ORCID,Hilliard Jamese J.1ORCID,Mannino Frank1,Raychaudhuri Aparna1ORCID,Carniel Elisabeth2,Demons Samandra3ORCID,Heine Henry S.3,Hershfield Jeremy3,Russo Riccardo4ORCID,Mega William M.5,Revelli David5ORCID,O’Dwyer Karen1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. GlaxoSmithKline Pharmaceuticals, Collegeville, PA, USA.

2. Yersinia Research Unit, Institut Pasteur, Paris France.

3. U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, Fort Detrick, MD, USA.

4. Rutgers University School of Medicine, Newark, NJ, USA.

5. Lovelace Biomedical and Environmental Research Institute, Albuquerque, NM, USA.

Abstract

Gepotidacin is a first-in-class triazaacenaphthylene antibacterial agent that selectively inhibits bacterial DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV through a unique binding mode and has the potential to treat a number of bacterial diseases. Development of this new agent to treat pneumonic plague caused by Yersinia pestis depends on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Animal Rule testing pathway, as testing in humans is not feasible. Here, preclinical studies were conducted in the African green monkey (AGM) inhalational model of pneumonic plague to test the efficacy of gepotidacin. AGMs infected with Y. pestis were dosed intravenously with gepotidacin (48, 36, or 28 milligrams/kilogram per day) for 10 days to provide a plasma concentration that would support a rationale for a 1000 mg twice or thrice daily intravenous dose in humans or saline as a control. The primary end point was AGM survival with predefined euthanasia criteria. Secondary end points included survival duration and bacterial clearance. Gepotidacin showed activity in vitro against diverse Y. pestis isolates including antibiotic-resistant strains. All control animals in the inhalational plague studies succumbed to plague and were blood culture and organ culture positive for Y. pestis . Gepotidacin provided a 75 to 100% survival benefit with all dose regimens. All surviving animals were blood culture and organ culture negative for Y. pestis . Our randomized, controlled efficacy trials in the AGM pneumonic plague nonhuman primate model together with the in vitro Y. pestis susceptibility data support the use of gepotidacin as a treatment for pneumonic plague caused by Y. pestis .

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference45 articles.

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4. World Health Organization Plague outbreak Madagascar (WHO External Situational Report Series No. 14 World Health Organization 2017).

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