AI Article Synopsis

  • New narrow-spectrum antibiotics for Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) are changing how we measure treatment success from just after therapy to 30 days later.
  • The current way of defining successful treatment, based on the number of unformed bowel movements (UBMs), isn't really working and might make it hard to know if a treatment was successful long-term.
  • The authors suggest better ways to define success in trials, like having fewer UBMs per day and looking at stool types a short time after treatment ends.

Article Abstract

With the approval and development of narrow-spectrum antibiotics for the treatment of Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI), the primary endpoint for treatment success of CDI antibiotic treatment trials has shifted from treatment response at end of therapy to sustained response 30 days after completed therapy. The current definition of a successful response to treatment (three or fewer unformed bowel movements [UBMs] per day for 1-2 days) has not been validated, does not reflect CDI management, and could impair assessments for successful treatment at 30 days. We propose new definitions to optimise trial design to assess sustained response. Primarily, we suggest that the initial response at the end of treatment be defined as (1) three or fewer UBMs per day, (2) a reduction in UBMs of more than 50% per day, (3) a decrease in stool volume of more than 75% for those with ostomy, or (4) attainment of bowel movements of Bristol Stool Form Scale types 1-4, on average, by day 2 after completion of primary CDI therapy (ie, assessed on day 11 and day 12 of a 10-day treatment course) and following an investigator determination that CDI treatment can be ceased.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(23)00047-6DOI Listing

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