
FDA’s CNPV Pilot Gives First Approval to Antibiotic for Pneumonia and Sinusitis
Key Takeaways
- The CNPV pilot program approved its first drug, an amoxicillin-clavulanate potassium antibiotic, in two months, enhancing domestic manufacturing and national security.
- Augmentin XR, combining amoxicillin and clavulanate, treats community-acquired pneumonia and acute bacterial sinusitis in adults and children.
The approval was granted to USAntibiotics, with FDA saying it addresses pronounced antibiotic shortages in the past two decades.
An amoxicillin-clavulanate potassium antibiotic made by USAntibiotics has become the first drug to be approved via FDA’s
"Over the past few decades, America lost control of supply chains for key medicines we depend on,” FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, MD, MPH, said in a press release (1). “That chapter is over—we’re entering a new era of manufacturing here at home. This first drug approval under the CNPV pilot program will strengthen domestic manufacturing and increase our national security."
What does Augmentin XR do?
Combining the semisynthetic antibiotic amoxicillin and the β-lactamase inhibitor clavulanate, Augmentin XR is an oral antibacterial medication indicated for both adult and pediatric patients, for treatment of community-acquired pneumonia and acute bacterial sinusitis (1).
FDA said that a multidisciplinary team participated in the review, integrating quality assessment and communication between FDA and the drug sponsor (1). The team was comprised of drug substance, drug product, manufacturing, facilities, and biopharmaceutics experts.
How did the CNPV start? What has the industry reaction been?
The creation of the CNPV was
Pharmaceutical Technology® provided an in-depth look at industry reaction to the implementation of the CNPV in November 2025,
“The reduction in formal review time does not imply that product development, marketing preparation, or post-approval planning must also be compressed proportionally,”
“From a risk and compliance perspective, compressed timelines amplify every weakness in a company’s quality risk management (QRM) framework,” said
No matter how thoroughly companies may be preparing, Rory Budihandojo, an independent good manufacturing practices consultant, said plenty of uncertainty remains.
“It is not clear logistically how FDA can provide resources needed for this short/intense review without impacting other FDA review programs (e.g., may divert resources from FDA’s regular standard review program to this expedited review program),” Budihandojo said (8). “Thus, it may also impact therapies that are currently under review, including the potential of resource allocation from FDA’s other priority review programs, such as the Priority Review Voucher.”
References
1. FDA.
2. FDA.
3. FDA.
4. FDA.
5. Cole, C.
6. Cole, C.
7. Cole, C.
8. Cole, C.
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