Late clinical-stage biotechnology company Armata Pharmaceuticals Inc (NYSE American:ARMP) announced on Monday that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted Qualified Infectious Disease Product (QIDP) designation to AP-SA02, the company's Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) multi-phage product candidate, for intravenous use for adjunct treatment of complicated bacteraemia caused by methicillin-sensitive S. aureus (MSSA) or methicillin resistant S. aureus (MRSA).
Armata is developing AP-SA02, a fixed multi-phage phage cocktail, for the treatment of complicated bacteraemia caused by S. aureus, including MSSA and MRSA strains.
The company plans to advance AP-SA02 into a Phase 3 superiority study in complicated S. aureus bacteraemia, anticipated to initiate in the second half of 2026.
Dr. Deborah Birx, Armata CEO, said: "The FDA's decision to grant QIDP designation to AP-SA02 underscores the urgent need for innovative antibacterial therapies to address serious and drug-resistant S. aureus infections. This designation recognises the potential of AP-SA02 and supports our mission to advance bacteriophage-based therapies to patients with unmet medical needs through efficient, rigorously designed, randomised controlled clinical trials."
Johnson & Johnson submits sBLA to FDA for first-ever treatment for wAIHA
Epredia signs EU distribution deal with Mindpeak for AI pathology software
AlzeCure's ACD440 granted EU orphan drug status for erythromelalgia
Armata Pharmaceuticals' AP-SA02 receives QIDP designation from US FDA
Astellas Pharma signs global strategic collaboration with Vir Biotechnology
Illumina sets out 18-Month NovaSeq X roadmap to boost sequencing performance and scale
Gossamer Bio reports topline Phase 3 PROSERA results for seralutinib in PAH
Novo Nordisk's CagriSema achieves 23% weight loss but misses primary endpoint in REDEFINE 4 trial
NICE recommends epcoritamab for relapsed or refractory follicular lymphoma
AbbVie's VENCLEXTA (venetoclax) and acalabrutinib combination receives US FDA approval to treat CLL