Gepotidacin is a novel antibiotic currently in Phase 3 development by GSK as a potential treatment for uncomplicated urinary tract infection and uncomplicated gonorrhea. Before this project, the distribution of this antibiotic at infection site in peripheral tissues after oral administration (distribution of the drug throughout the body) was not well understood.
The aim of this project was to investigate the potential of this new antibiotic for the treatment of a bacterial infection of the throat (pharyngeal gonorrhea) caused by the bacteria Neisseria gonorrhoeae or prostatitis (inflammation of the prostate) caused by the bacteria Escherichia coli, by demonstrating sufficient penetration of this novel antibiotic into tonsils and prostate tissue. The work planned and now completed includes in vitro experiments (in a test tube or similar), animal experiments, and a Phase 1 clinical study in patients undergoing prostate surgery or tonsillectomy.
The objective of the Phase 1 clinical study was to measure the concentrations of gepotidacin in prostate and tonsil tissue. The measurement of the drug was performed, after a single oral dose of gepotidacin, in the tissue which has been removed within the surgery. For this purpose, a method called microdialysis was used. Microdialysis consists of placing an artificial capillary in a tissue to directly measure drug concentrations in the space between cells, including soft tissues, where the bacteria establish an infection.