Merck
antibody reduces risk of Clostridium difficile recurrence: study
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[September 21, 2015] By
Deena Beasley
(Reuters) - An experimental antibody
developed by Merck & Co Inc was shown in pivotal studies to reduce by
about 10 percentage points the risk that infection with Clostridium
difficile bacterium, which can cause a deadly diarrhea, will recur.
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In the United States, C. difficile infects nearly half a million
people each year and contributes to around 29,000 deaths. The
infection is treated with standard antibiotics, which also wipe out
friendly bacteria that normally keep C. difficile under control.
Merck said two Phase 3 studies, presented on Sunday at a medical
meeting in San Diego, found 12 weeks of treatment with antibiotics
and a one-time infusion of bezlotoxumab, designed to block the
ability of a toxin to bind to cells, reduced to about 15 percent the
risk that C. difficile would recur. The studies found that the
infection recurred in about 25 percent of patients treated with
antibiotics and a placebo.
"We have therapies to treat the initial episode, but this infection
comes back frequently - there is a 25 percent risk of recurrence
after the first time, and that rises to 40 percent or even 60
percent after the second infection," said Nick Kartsonis, associate
vice president in clinical research, infectious diseases at Merck.
The studies showed no benefit from a second experimental antibody,
actoxumab, either alone or in combination with bezlotoxumab. Merck
said the actoxumab arm was stopped for efficacy and safety reasons
after an interim analysis.
The company said it plans to file before the end of the year for
regulatory approval of bezlotoxumab, which it licensed from
Massachusetts Biologic Laboratories and Medarex, now owned by
Bristol-Myers Squibb.
Side effects, including nausea, diarrhea and urinary tract
infection, occurred at similar rates for patients in both the
treatment and placebo arms of the trials.
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The incidence of C. difficile infection has risen sharply over the
last two decades and is now a leading cause of healthcare-acquired
infections in community hospitals in the United States, according to
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Other companies are working on vaccines against C. difficile.
Doctors are also treating patients with "stool transplants," which
involves inserting fecal material from a healthy person into the gut
of someone with severe diarrhea in order to restore friendly
bacteria.
(Reporting by Deena Beasley; Editing by James Dalgleish)
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