FDA/CDC

FDA approves fidaxomicin for treatment of C. difficile–associated diarrhea in kids


 

The Food and Drug Administration has approved fidaxomicin (Dificid) for the treatment of Clostridioides difficile–associated diarrhea in children aged 6 months and older.

FDA icon

Approval was based on results from SUNSHINE, a phase 3, multicenter, investigator-blind, randomized, parallel-group study in 142 pediatric patients aged between 6 months and 18 years with confirmed C. difficile infection who received either fidaxomicin or vancomycin for 10 days. Clinical response 2 days after the conclusion of treatment was similar in both groups (77.6% for fidaxomicin vs. 70.5% for vancomycin), and fidaxomicin had a superior sustained response 30 days after the conclusion of treatment (68.4% vs. 50.0%).

The safety of fidaxomicin was assessed in a pair of clinical trials involving 136 patients; the most common adverse events were pyrexia, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, increased aminotransferases, and rash. Four patients discontinued fidaxomicin treatment because of adverse events, and four patients died during the trials, though all deaths were in patients aged younger than 2 years and seemed to be related to other comorbidities.

C. difficile is an important cause of health care– and community-associated diarrheal illness in children, and sustained cure is difficult to achieve in some patients. The fidaxomicin pediatric trial was the first randomized, controlled trial of C. difficile infection treatment in children,” Larry K. Kociolek, MD, associate medical director of infection prevention and control at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, said in the press release from Merck, manufacturer of fidaxomicin.

*This story was updated on 1/27/2020.

Recommended Reading

Australia’s rotavirus outbreak wasn’t caused by vaccine effectiveness decline
MDedge Infectious Disease
Direct-acting antiviral therapy boosts survival for infected HCC patients
MDedge Infectious Disease
A sepsis death linked to fecal microbiota transplantation
MDedge Infectious Disease
Fewer bloodstream infections with FMT for C. difficile
MDedge Infectious Disease
Rifabutin-based triple therapy for H. pylori gets high marks
MDedge Infectious Disease
HVPG predicts clinical benefit after sustained virologic response
MDedge Infectious Disease
Hepatitis B debrief: Key themes that emerged at AASLD
MDedge Infectious Disease
What’s new in hepatitis C: Four themes that dominated at the Liver Meeting
MDedge Infectious Disease
A triple-antibiotic cure for Crohn’s disease?
MDedge Infectious Disease
FDA clears first fully disposable duodenoscope
MDedge Infectious Disease