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Recently published results from a Phase 3 clinical trial support Pfizer and Abbvie’s aztreonam-avibactam as a potential treatment for patients with serious gram-negative bacterial infections and limited treatment options. Aztreonam-avibactam is a combination of two antibiotic drugs that work together to effectively fight off tricky bacteria resistant to nearly all currently available antibiotics. The treatment was approved in April by the European Medicines Agency based on the results of two previous Phase 3 clinical trials that investigated the treatment's efficacy in treating several types of multidrug-resistant infections.
Last week, TB Alliance announced the award of a $7.35 million four-year grant from the US Department of Defense’s Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs for the research and development of host-directed approaches for treating tuberculosis (TB). Host-directed approaches, which target the immune response of the host (the infected person) rather than directly targeting the bacteria, could reduce the likelihood of the emergence of drug resistance and, in combination with new TB drugs, could offer shorter and less long and burdensome treatment regimens for those with drug-resistance and drug-sensitive TB. Specifically, the project will work toward preclinical proof-of-concept for at least one novel adjunct TB host-directed therapy and one therapeutic vaccine.
At the HIV Research for Prevention Conference last week, the Population Council announced the results of a Phase 1 trial conducted in South Africa, which suggest that the three-month dapivirine vaginal ring for HIV prevention will be as effective as the one-month ring. The three-month dapivirine vaginal ring, a flexible silicon ring self-inserted into the vagina that slowly releases an antiretroviral drug to prevent HIV infection, was found to deliver the drug at higher levels than the one-month ring. If the longer-acting ring continues to demonstrate success in future trials, it could offer a more cost-effective and convenient option for women—it is expected to reduce the cost per user by 60 percent.