AI Article Synopsis

  • Gram-negative bacteria have increasingly shown resistance to antimicrobials over recent decades, posing significant challenges in hospital settings worldwide.
  • In response, researchers and the pharmaceutical industry have introduced several new antimicrobials in the last five years, including cefiderocol and omadacycline, which are designed to tackle resistant bacterial strains.
  • The review examines the properties and clinical data of these new drugs, as well as other promising agents currently in advanced phase 3 clinical trials, like aztreonam-avibactam and sulopenem.

Article Abstract

Gram-negative bacterial resistance to antimicrobials has had an exponential increase at a global level during the last decades and represent an everyday challenge, especially for the hospital practice of our era. Concerted efforts from the researchers and the industry have recently provided several novel promising antimicrobials, resilient to various bacterial resistance mechanisms. There are new antimicrobials that became commercially available during the last five years, namely, cefiderocol, imipenem-cilastatin-relebactam, eravacycline, omadacycline, and plazomicin. Furthermore, other agents are in advanced development, having reached phase 3 clinical trials, namely, aztreonam-avibactam, cefepime-enmetazobactam, cefepime-taniborbactam, cefepime-zidebactam, sulopenem, tebipenem, and benapenem. In this present review, we critically discuss the characteristics of the above-mentioned antimicrobials, their pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic properties and the current clinical data.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10135111PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics12040761DOI Listing

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