Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Thursday, September 08 2022 - 19:39
AsiaNet
ONE DRUG FOR ONE BUG: DEBIOPHARM TO DISCUSS THE POTENTIAL OF PATHOGEN-SPECIFIC ANTIBIOTICS AT THE 2022 WORLD AMR CONGRESS
LAUSANNE, Switzerland, Sept. 8, 2022 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/-

    - International health authorities, such as the WHO and the CDC are warning 
of the emerging danger of bacterial infections resistant to current antibiotics
    - The 2022 World Anti-Microbial Resistance (AMR) Congress in the greater 
Washington D.C. area is serving as a forum to openly address the threat of 
AMR    
    - Debiopharm will join the action-focused discussions around this silent 
pandemic in 3 panel discussions, presenting their microbiome-sparing FabI 
inhibitor class as a future tool to fight AMR

    Debiopharm, (www.debiopharm.com) a privately-owned, Swiss-based, 
biopharmaceutical company committed to the development of novel class 
antibiotics, today revealed its involvement in three panel discussions at the 
World AMR Congress, taking place in Fort Washington, Maryland, from September 
7th – 8th. This conference offers pharmaceutical companies, government, and 
policy stakeholders from all around the world the opportunity to meet, discuss 
and formulate initiatives to effectively tackle the emerging threat of 
antimicrobial resistance. Debiopharm will present developments on its FabI 
inhibitor antibiotic class including afabicin (Debio 1450), Debio 1453 and 
Debio 1454S, all of which have microbiome-sparing potential, a promising 
characteristic for AMR prevention.

    AMR is a leading cause of death and disability and represents a major 
threat to human health. Among the 1.27 million deaths1 that occur globally due 
to antibiotic-resistant infections each year, more than 35,0002 occur in the 
United States and over 33,0003 occur in Europe. The economic burden of AMR is 
also significant4 in direct health care and lost productivity costs are 
attributable to antibiotic-resistant bacteria like Staphylococcus spp.

    The WHO and the CDC have identified such pathogens posing a threat to 
public health and Debiopharm, one of the few private companies still engaged in 
the development of novel antibiotics, has directed its efforts toward targeting 
them. The World AMR summit offers a great opportunity to governments, funds, 
associations, and passionate companies like Debiopharm to join forces against 
one of the top global public threats facing humanity.

    "We're proud to unveil more on the role our novel class antibiotic, the 
FabI inhibitors, amongst key international stakeholders at the World AMR. We're 
hoping that our collaboration with specialized organizations and lawmakers will 
trigger the much needed changes in the way we think about the unmet need for 
antibiotics as well as provide hope to people and health practitioners dealing 
with these seemingly insurmountable infections," stated Mohammed Benghezal, 
Global Project Lead in Anti-infectives, Debiopharm.

    "Pathogen-specific antibiotic effect without harming the 'good' gut 
bacteria: it is the best of both worlds! As we research their efficacy and 
safety profile, this class of antibiotics could be like no other," expressed 
Ricardo Chaves, Executive Medical Director, Debiopharm. "Now is the time to 
encourage the development of new antibiotic classes by establishing new 
business models that will assure future patients access to effective treatments 
that will knock out highly resistant bacterial infections and at the same time 
prevent AMR development."
    
    World AMR 2022 Session Details: 
Session 1: Sept.7th, Keynote panel discussion, 09:40 – 10:20 EST
Congress agenda: 
Disease Prevention & Control Summit – Funding & Commercial Landscape
Speakers: 
Ricardo Chaves, Executive Medical Director - Debiopharm + other invited speakers

    World AMR 2022 Session Details: 
Session 2: Sept.7th, 11:40-12:10 EST
Congress agenda: 
Antibiotic Development – Panel Discussion Pathogen-specific antibiotic therapy: 
A new paradigm to face AMR?
Speakers: 
Ricardo Chaves, Executive Medical Director, Debiopharm
Vance Fowler, Professor of Medicine, c and Microbiology, Duke University, North 
Carolina
James Anderson, Executive Director Global Health, IFPMA

    World AMR 2022 Session Details: 
Session 3: Sept.8th, 11:40-12:00 EST
Congress agenda: 
Innovation Showcase - Microbiome 
One Drug for One Bug: FabI Novel Class Antibiotics for Microbiome Sparing and 
AMR Prevention
Speakers: 
Riccardo Nisato, Licensing and Grant Associate Manager, Debiopharm
Mohammed Benghezal, Global Project Lead in Anti-infectives, Debiopharm

    About afabicin

    Afabicin (Debio 1450) is Debiopharm's first-in-class FabI inhibitor against 
Staphylococcus spp., whose sub-class Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus 
aureus (MRSA) is high on the WHO global priority pathogen list and deemed a 
"serious threat" by the CDC. Afabicin can be administered orally or IV and 
selectively targets Staphylococcus' essential bacterial fatty acid 
biosynthesis. Promising results have been obtained in a comparative 
double-blind Phase 2 trial with afabicin in acute bacterial skin and skin 
structure infections. Currently, an international Phase 2 trial in bone and 
joint infections is being conducted comparing afabicin to standard antibiotics.

    About Debio 1453 and Debio 1454S

    Analogous to Afabicin, the preclinical compounds Debio 1453 and Debio 1454S 
are potential first-in-class pathogen-specific drugs targeting the essential 
bacterial fatty acid biosynthesis. Debio 1453 can be administered orally or 
intramuscularly to treat Neisseria gonorrhoeae infections while Debio 1454S is 
being developed for IV use in cases of hospital-acquired pneumonia and 
ventilator-associated pneumonia caused by carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter 
baumannii.

    Debiopharm's fight against antimicrobial resistance 

    Debiopharm, an innovation-focused, Swiss biopharmaceutical company is one 
of the few privately owned companies developing novel class antibiotics to 
combat hard-to-treat infections. Through their unique partnership-based 
business model, the company is advancing pathogen-specific antibiotics from 
early stage through phase II clinical research with afabicin, specifically 
targeting staphylococci, being the most clinically advanced for the treatment 
of bone and joint infections. As a result of high selectivity, FabI inhibitors 
specifically target selected pathogens while preserving intestinal microbiota 
and meet all four WHO 2020 innovation criteria: new chemical class, new target, 
new mode of action and no cross-resistance to other antibiotic classes.

    For more information, please visit www.debiopharm.com

    We are on Twitter. Follow us @DebiopharmNews at 
http://twitter.com/DebiopharmNews

    Debiopharm Contact 

    Dawn Haughton 
Communication Manager 
dawn.haughton@debiopharm.com 
Tel: +41 (0)21 321 01 11

    References

    [1] Antimicrobial Resistance Collaborators. Global burden of bacterial 
antimicrobial resistance in 2019: a systematic analysis. Lancet. 
2022;399(10325):629-655.

    [2] CDC Antibiotic resistance threats in the United States, 2019. 
https://www.cdc.gov/drugresistance/pdf/threats-report/2019-ar-threats-report-508.pdf 


    [3] Cassini A, et al. Attributable deaths and disability-adjusted 
life-years caused by infections with antibiotic-resistant bacteria in the EU 
and the European Economic Area in 2015: a population-level modelling analysis. 
Lancet Infect Dis. 2019;19(1):56-66.

    [4] CDC Antibiotic resistance threats in the United States, 2013. 
https://www.cdc.gov/drugresistance/pdf/ar-threats-2013-508.pdf 

    SOURCE: Debiopharm International SA