4.7 Article

Geographic Shifts in Antibacterial Drug Clinical Trial Enrollment: Implications for Generalizability

Journal

CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 72, Issue 8, Pages 1422-1428

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciaa246

Keywords

antibacterial drugs; clinical trials; North America; Eastern Europe; generalizability

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As drug development becomes more globalized, geographical recruitment trends for recent antibacterial clinical trials vary by indication, but demographic characteristics and microbiology are broadly similar across regions, alleviating concerns about generalizability due to shifting enrollment trends.
Background. As drug development has globalized, trials have increasingly enrolled participants from all parts of the world rather than just the United States and Western Europe. For antibacterial drug trials, understanding enrollment trends and regional differences is important for generalizability considerations. Methods. We retrospectively analyzed 42 phase 3 trials submitted to the US Food and Drug Administration after 2001 for complicated urinary tract infection (cUTI), complicated intra-abdominal infection (cIAI), community-acquired bacterial pneumonia (CABP), and acute bacterial skin and skin structure infection (ABSSSI) (n = 29 282 participants). Enrollment numbers, demographics, clinical characteristics, and microbiological data were compared to identify temporal and geographic trends. Results. For cUTI, cIAI, and CABP trials, Eastern European enrollment greatly increased over the study period. For ABSSSI trials, North American enrollment increased. Demographic characteristics and regional microbiology among regions were broadly similar with several exceptions. For cIAI trials, Eastern European participants had the lowest proportion of participants with prior antibacterial drug therapy. For ABSSSI trials, North American participants more commonly reported intravenous drug use. Microbiological differences relative to North America included a greater proportion of Klebsiella pneumoniae among Asian cIAI isolates (17.8% vs 9.0%, P = .0057), a higher proportion of cephalosporin resistance in South American Enterobacteriaceae cUTI isolates (26.8% vs 15.7%, P = .044), and a lower proportion of Staphylococcus aureus in Eastern European ABSSSI isolates (43.7% vs 61.9%, P < .0001). Conclusions. Geographic trends in recruitment for recent antibacterial clinical trials differ by indication. Regional similarities in demographic characteristics and microbiology across regions lessen concerns regarding generalizability due to shifting enrollment trends.

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