This study is being conducted to evaluate the safety, efficacy (clinical and microbiological), pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics of GSK2251052 and to assess whether it would be a suitable antibiotic for the treatment for febrile lower cUTI and pyelonephritis(complicated and uncomplicated). GSK2251052 will be compared to imipenem-cilastatin, which is an antibiotic commonly used to treat serious cUTI infections. GSK2251052 has a spectrum of microbiological activity that includes pathogens responsible for cUTI.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
20
Reconstituted, added to 250mL 0.9% NaCl solution and administered via IV infusion
Prepare as per prescribing information instructions in 100 mL bag of 0.9% NaCl and administered via IV infusion
saline placebo
GSK Investigational Site
Los Angeles, California, United States
Change From Baseline in Clinical Laboratory Parameters- Albumin and Total Protein
Clinical laboratory parameters included albumin and total protein. Baseline was Day 1. Change from Baseline was calculated by subtracting Baseline values from individual post-Baseline values. Mean change from Baseline up to Late follow-up visit in albumin and total protein are presented.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1) to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Change From Baseline in Clinical Laboratory Parameters- Creatinine Clearance, Estimated (CCE)
Clinical laboratory parameters included CCE. Baseline was Day 1. Change from Baseline was calculated by subtracting Baseline values from individual post-Baseline values. Mean change from Baseline up to Late follow-up visit in CCE are presented.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1) to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Change From Baseline in Clinical Laboratory Parameters- Creatinine, Direct Bilirubin and Total Bilirubin
Clinical laboratory parameters included creatinine, direct bilirubin and total bilirubin. Baseline was Day 1. Change from Baseline was calculated by subtracting Baseline values from individual post-Baseline values. Mean change from Baseline up to Late follow-up visit in creatinine, direct bilirubin and total bilirubin are presented.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1) to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Change From Baseline in Clinical Laboratory Parameters- Calcium, Carbon-dioxide (C02) Content/Bicarbonate, Chloride, Glucose, Potassium, Sodium and Urea/Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN)
Clinical laboratory parameters included C02 content/bicarbonate, chloride, glucose, potassium, sodium and urea/BUN. Baseline was Day 1. Change from Baseline was calculated by subtracting Baseline values from individual post-Baseline values. Mean change from Baseline up to Late follow-up visit in C02 content/bicarbonate, chloride, glucose, potassium, sodium and urea/BUN are presented.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1) to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
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GSK Investigational Site
Council Bluffs, Iowa, United States
GSK Investigational Site
Topeka, Kansas, United States
GSK Investigational Site
Corsicana, Texas, United States
GSK Investigational Site
Chicoutimi, Quebec, Canada
GSK Investigational Site
Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada
GSK Investigational Site
Suresnes, France
GSK Investigational Site
Toulouse, France
GSK Investigational Site
Athens, Greece
GSK Investigational Site
Chaïdári, Greece
...and 14 more locations
Change From Baseline in Clinical Laboratory Parameters- Alanine Amino Transferase (ALT), Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP), Aspartate Amino Transferase (AST), Creatine Kinase and Gamma Glutamyl Transferase (GGT)
Clinical laboratory parameters included ALT, ALP, AST, Creatine kinase and GGT. Baseline was Day 1. Change from Baseline was calculated by subtracting Baseline values from individual post-Baseline values. Mean change from Baseline up to Late follow-up visit in ALT, ALP, AST, Creatine kinase and GGT are presented.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1) to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Number of Participants With Adverse Events (AE) and Serious Adverse Events (SAE)
AE is any untoward medical occurrence in a participant or clinical investigation participant, temporally associated with the use of a medicinal product, whether or not considered related to the medicinal product. An AE can therefore be any unfavorable and unintended sign (including an abnormal laboratory finding), symptom, or disease (new or exacerbated) temporally associated with the use of a medicinal product. For marketed medicinal products, this also includes failure to produce expected benefits (i.e., lack of efficacy), abuse or misuse. SAE is any untoward medical occurrence that, at any dose results in death, is life-threatening, requires hospitalization or prolongation of existing hospitalization, results in disability/incapacity, or is a congenital anomaly/birth defect or is medically significant.
Time frame: Up to 28 days post-therapy
Number of Participants With Abnormal Electrocardiogram (ECG) Findings
Twelve lead ECGs were obtained during the study using an ECG machine that automatically measured PR, QRS, QT, and QT corrected by Bazett's formula (QTcB), QT corrected by Fridericia's formula (QTcF) intervals. Twelve lead ECGs were performed with the participant in a semi-supine position having rested in this position for at least 10 minutes beforehand. Measurements that deviated substantially from previous readings were repeated immediately. Three measurements were taken at pre-dose on Day 1 at least 5 min apart. One additional ECG measurement was taken after completion of the first infusion of study medication. Two ECG measurements (pre and post-1st infusion of the day) were taken on Day 4 while the participant was on IV therapy. When there was an abnormal finding, two more were taken and the mean PR interval, QRS duration, QT interval and QTcB were calculated from automated ECG readings. One ECG measurement was taken at the early safety follow-up visit.
Time frame: Up to Late Follow-up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Summary of Vital Signs: Mean Systolic Blood Pressure (SBP) and Diastolic Blood Pressure (DBP)
Vital sign measurements included SBP and DBP (supine or semi-supine). Measurements that deviated substantially from previous readings were repeated immediately. Mean SBP and DBP are presented.
Time frame: Up to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Summary of Vital Signs- Mean Heart Rate
Vital sign measurements included heart rate. Measurements that deviated substantially from previous readings were repeated immediately. Mean heart rate is presented.
Time frame: Up to Late Follow-up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Summary of Vital Signs- Mean Respiration Rate
Vital sign measurements included respiratory rate. Measurements that deviated substantially from previous readings were repeated immediately. Mean respiration rate are presented.
Time frame: Up to Late Follow-up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Summary of Vital Signs- Mean Temperature
Vital sign measurements included temperature (oral, tympanic or rectal). Measurements that deviated substantially from previous readings were repeated immediately. Temperature was assessed as normal hospital practice dictated and the maximum daily temperature was recorded in the electronic case report form (eCRF).
Time frame: Up to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Therapeutic Response at the Test of Cure Visit
The therapeutic response was the combination of a participant's clinical and microbiological response. It was assessed at the Test of Cure visit in participants who have a qualifying Gram-negative uropathogen at Baseline and have had a minimum of 5 days of IV therapy. Therapeutic response was a measure of the overall efficacy response, and a therapeutic success referred to participants who have been deemed both a 'clinical success' and a 'microbiological success'. All other combinations (other than 'clinical success' + 'microbiological success') were deemed failures for therapeutic response.
Time frame: Test of Cure Visit (5 to 9 days post-IV therapy)
Change From Baseline in Hematology Parameters- Hematocrit
Hematology parameters included hematocrit. Baseline was Day 1. Change from Baseline was calculated by subtracting Baseline values from individual post-Baseline values. Mean change from Baseline up to Late follow-up visit in hematocrit are presented.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1) to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Change From Baseline in Hematology Parameters- Mean Corpuscle Hemoglobin (MCH)
Hematology parameters included MCH. Baseline was Day 1. Change from Baseline was calculated by subtracting Baseline values from individual post-Baseline values. Mean change from Baseline up to Late follow-up visit in MCH are presented.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1) to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Change From Baseline in Hematology Parameters- Mean Corpuscle Volume (MCV)
Hematology parameters included MCV. Baseline was Day 1. Change from Baseline was calculated by subtracting Baseline values from individual post-Baseline values. Mean change from Baseline up to Late follow-up visit in MCV are presented.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1) to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Change From Baseline in Hematology Parameters- Red Blood Cell (RBC) Count and Reticulocytes
Hematology parameters included RBC count and reticulocytes. Baseline was Day 1. Change from Baseline was calculated by subtracting Baseline values from individual post-Baseline values. Mean change from Baseline up to Late follow-up visit in RBC count and reticulocytes are presented.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1) to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Change From Baseline in Hematology Parameters- Hemoglobin and Mean Corpuscle Hemoglobin Concentration (MCHC)
Hematology parameters included hemoglobin and MCHC. Baseline was Day 1. Change from Baseline was calculated by subtracting Baseline values from individual post-Baseline values. Mean change from Baseline up to Late follow-up visit in hemoglobin and MCHC are presented.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1) to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Change From Baseline in Hematology Parameters- Basophils, Eosinophils, Lymphocytes, Monocytes, Platelet Count, Total Neutrophils and White Blood Cell Count (WBC)
Hematology parameters included basophils, eosinophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, platelet count, total neutrophils and WBC. Baseline was Day 1. Change from Baseline was calculated by subtracting Baseline values from individual post-Baseline values. Mean change from Baseline up to Late follow-up visit in basophils, eosinophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, platelet count, total neutrophils and WBC are presented.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1) to Late Follow up Visit (21 to 28 days post-IV therapy)
Microbiological Response at the End of IV Therapy Visit, Test of Cure Visit and Late Follow-Up Visit
Microbiological response involved both microbiological success and microbiological failure. A reduction in the uropathogens in the urine culture and no growth on blood culture was termed as microbiological success. Increase in the uropathogens in the urine culture and pathogens identified in the blood culture or use of antibacterials other than study treatments were classified as microbiological failures.
Time frame: End of IV therapy (0-24 hours post-therapy), Test of Cure Visit (5 to 9 days post-IV therapy) and Late Follow-up (21-28 days post-therapy)
Clinical Response at the End of IV Therapy Visit, Test of Cure Visit and Late Follow-Up Visit
Clinical response was a combination of clinical success and clinical failure. In clinical success, participants showed no signs and symptoms of pyelonephritis and lower complicated urinary tract infection and antibiotics are not used for the same. In clinical failure, there is reappearance of signs and symptoms of and lower complicated urinary tract infection and participant required antibiotics for the same.
Time frame: End of IV therapy (0-24 hours post-therapy), Test of Cure Visit (5 to 9 days post-IV therapy) and Late Follow-up (21-28 days post-therapy)
Therapeutic Response (Combined Clinical and Microbiological Response) at the End of IV Visit and Late Follow-Up Visit
The therapeutic response was the combination of a participant's clinical and microbiological response. It was assessed at the Test of Cure visit in participants who have a qualifying Gram-negative uropathogen at Baseline and have had a minimum of 5 days of IV therapy. Therapeutic response was a measure of the overall efficacy response, and a therapeutic success referred to participants who have been deemed both a 'clinical success' and a 'microbiological success'. All other combinations (other than 'clinical success' + 'microbiological success') were deemed failures for therapeutic response.
Time frame: End of IV therapy (0-24 hours post-therapy) and Late Follow-up (21-28 days post-therapy)
Maximum Plasma Concentration (Cmax) of GSK2251052
The planned pharmacokinetic (PK) and PK/pharmacodynamic analyses were not performed, because the PK data was not collected.
Time frame: Day 3: Pre- dose (just prior to the start of the first infusion of the day) and 1 hour (just prior to the end of the infusion), 2, 4, and 12 hours post-dose
Area Under the Concentration Time Curve (AUC) of GSK2251052
The planned pharmacokinetic (PK) and PK/pharmacodynamic analyses were not performed, because the PK data was not collected.
Time frame: Day 3: Pre- dose (just prior to the start of the first infusion of the day) and 1 hour (just prior to the end of the infusion), 2, 4, and 12 hours post-dose
Time to Cmax (Tmax) of GSK2251052
The planned pharmacokinetic (PK) and PK/pharmacodynamic analyses were not performed, because the PK data was not collected.
Time frame: Day 3: Pre- dose (just prior to the start of the first infusion of the day) and 1 hour (just prior to the end of the infusion), 2, 4, and 12 hours post-dose
Cmax of GSK2251052 Using Non-intensive PK Sampling
The planned pharmacokinetic (PK) and PK/pharmacodynamic analyses were not performed, because the PK data was not collected.
Time frame: Day 4: Pre- dose (just prior to the start of the first infusion of the day) and 1 hour (just prior to the end of the infusion), 2, 4, and 12 hours post-dose
AUC of GSK2251052 Using Non-intensive PK Sampling
The planned pharmacokinetic (PK) and PK/pharmacodynamic analyses were not performed, because the PK data was not collected.
Time frame: Day 4: Pre- dose (just prior to the start of the first infusion of the day) and 1 hour (just prior to the end of the infusion), 2, 4, and 12 hours post-dose
Tmax of GSK2251052 Using Non-intensive PK Sampling
The planned pharmacokinetic (PK) and PK/pharmacodynamic analyses were not performed, because the PK data was not collected.
Time frame: Day 4: Pre- dose (just prior to the start of the first infusion of the day) and 1 hour (just prior to the end of the infusion), 2, 4, and 12 hours post-dose
Cmax of GSK2251052 Using Intensive PK Sampling
The planned pharmacokinetic (PK) and PK/pharmacodynamic analyses were not performed, because the PK data was not collected.
Time frame: Day 4: Pre-dose (just prior to the start of the first infusion of the day) 0.5, 1 hour (just prior to the end of the infusion), 1.25, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 8 and 12 hours post-dose
AUC of GSK2251052 Using Intensive PK Sampling
The planned pharmacokinetic (PK) and PK/pharmacodynamic analyses were not performed, because the PK data was not collected.
Time frame: Day 4: Pre-dose (just prior to the start of the first infusion of the day) 0.5, 1 hour (just prior to the end of the infusion), 1.25, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 8 and 12 hours post-dose
Tmax of GSK2251052 Using Intensive PK Sampling
The planned pharmacokinetic (PK) and PK/pharmacodynamic analyses were not performed, because the PK data was not collected.
Time frame: Day 4: Pre-dose (just prior to the start of the first infusion of the day) 0.5, 1 hour (just prior to the end of the infusion), 1.25, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 8 and 12 hours post-dose