Iterum’s oral sulopenem acceptance hinges on antibiotic stewardship efforts

In This Article:

As antibiotic resistance continues to rise globally, reviewers at a recent FDA meeting raised concerns about the potential risks of providing an oral antibiotic for uncomplicated urinary tract infections (uUTIs).

On September 9, the FDA’s Antimicrobial Drugs Advisory Committee (AMDAC) examined Iterum Therapeutics’s antibiotic oral sulopenem. Iterum’s drug, which is sulopenem etzadroxil combined with probenecid in a bilayer tablet, is a thiopenem antibiotic. If approved, it could become the first oral penem available in the US to treat uUTIs.

This was not the first time Iterum’s sulopenem reached the regulator. In July 2021, the FDA issued a complete response letter rejecting Iterum’s antibiotic due to insufficient evidence of effectiveness in the Phase III uUTI 301 (NCT03354598) and 310 (NCT05584657) trials. In the former study, oral sulopenem demonstrated efficacy in the ciprofloxacin-resistant patient cohort, but it was not effective in the ciprofloxacin-susceptible population, primarily due to microbiologic failure. Similarly, in the 310 study, Iterum’s sulopenem established efficacy in patients who were Augmentin (amoxicillin/clavulanate)-susceptible, but results were inconclusive in the Augmentin-resistant population due to the small sample size.

Furthermore, neither study recruited patients with uUTI due to resistant bacteria such as extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBL)-producers or those who failed first-line treatment.

After FDA feedback, Iterum initiated the Phase III REASSURE clinical trial in October 2022, which formed the basis of an NDA resubmission in April 2024. In the trial, oral sulopenem was effective in 61.7% of patients compared to 55% of patients on Augmentin. The FDA has set a prescription drug user fee act (PDUFA) date of October 25, by which it will assess the company’s new drug application (NDA) for oral sulopenem.

However, years of antibiotic overuse have made the employment of new and effective antimicrobials a Catch-22 situation. While new drugs are needed to combat resistance, widespread or indiscriminate use of these improved therapies could also lead to newly resistant organisms.

Very few companies are currently developing new antibiotics for patients, and this is an essential step in tackling the resistance problem, so Iterum’s new antibiotic is very welcome, says Vicky Bennett, a PhD researcher at the University of Bath, UK, focusing on antibiotic resistance. The availability of both intravenous and oral formulations will allow patients to access treatments outside of the hospital, allowing earlier hospital discharge, says Dr. Lars Bjerrum, a professor at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.