| Literature DB >> 22294858 |
Marisa H Miceli1, Pranatharthi Chandrasekar.
Abstract
Liposomal amphotericin B is a "true" liposomal formulation of amphotericin B with greatly reduced nephrotoxicity and minimal infusion-related toxicity. This broad spectrum polyene is well tolerated and effective against most invasive fungal infections. In view of the current limitations on diagnostic capability of invasive fungal infections, most clinicians are often compelled to use antifungal drugs in an empiric manner; liposomal amphotericin B continues to play an important role in the empiric management of invasive fungal infections, despite the recent availability of several other drugs in the azole and echinocandin classes.Entities:
Keywords: efficacy and safety; empiric therapy; immunocompromised hosts; invasive fungal infections; polyenes
Year: 2012 PMID: 22294858 PMCID: PMC3269132 DOI: 10.2147/IDR.S22587
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Drug Resist ISSN: 1178-6973 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Current strategies for the management of IFI in high-risk patients.
Notes: *High-resolution computed tomography scan of the lungs showing new ≥1 cm single or multiple nodules with or without halo sign, lobar consolidation, wedge-shaped consolidative infarct; **classic example: patients with proglonged and profound neutropenia after intense chemotherapy for hematologic malignancy.
Abbreviations: GM, serum Galactomannan; IFI, invasive fungal infection; PCR, polymerase chain reaction.
US Food and Drug Administration-approved indication of antifungal agents for the management of IFIs
| Indication | Echinocandins | Newer azoles | Polyenes | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CAS | MICA | ANID | VOR | POS | AmB-D | ABLC | ABCD | L-AmB | |
| Empiric treatment of invasive fungal infections | YES | YES | |||||||
| Prophylaxis of | YES | YES | |||||||
| Prophylaxis of invasive aspergillosis | YES | ||||||||
| Target therapy of invasive aspergillosis | YES | YES | YES | YES++ | YES | YES | |||
| Target therapy of mucormycosis | YES | YES++ | |||||||
| Salvage treatment of IFIs | YES | YES++ | |||||||
| Oropharyngeal candidiasis | YES | YES | YES | YES | YES++ | YES | |||
| Invasive candidiasis | YES | YES | YES | YES | YES | YES++ | YES | ||
Notes: In patients aged ≥13 years, who are at high risk of developing these infections due to being severely immunocompromised, such as hematopoietic stem-cell transplant recipients with graft versus host disease or those with hematologic malignancies with prolonged neutropenia from chemotherapy;
in patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplant;
infections with Scedosporium spp and Fusarium spp in patients refractory to or intolerant of other agents.
in nonneutropenic patients.
AmB-D is approved for the treatment of potentially life-threatening fungal infections: aspergillosis; cryptococcosis (torulosis); North American blasmomycosis; systemic candidiasis; coccidioidomycosis; histoplasmosis; and zgomycosis including mucormycosis due to susceptible species of the genera Absidia, Mucor, and Rhizopus and infections due to related susceptible species of Conidiobolus and Basidiobolus, and sporotrichosis;
ABLC approved for the treatment of invasive fungal infections in patients who are refractory to or intolerant of conventional amphotericin B;
ABCD is approved for the treatment of invasive aspergillosis in patients who are refractory to or intolerant of conventional amphotericin B;
L-AmB (AmBisome) is approved for the treatment of patients with Aspergillus spp, Candida spp, and/or infections due to Cryptococcus spp refractory to conventional AmB or in patients with marked renal impairment or when severe toxicity precludes the use of conventional AmB; also approved for the treatment of cryptococcal meningitis in human immunodeficiency virus–infected patients and visceral leishmaniasis.
Abbreviations: ABCD, amphotericin B colloidal dispersion; AmB-D, amphotericin B deoxycolate; ABLC, amphotericin B lipid complex; ANID, anidulafungin; CAS, caspofungin; IFIs, invasive fungal infections; L-AmB, liposomal amphotericin B; MICA, micafungin; POS, posaconazole; VOR, voriconazole.
Summary of clinical trials comparing efficacy and safety of liposomal amphotericin B with other antifungal agents for empirical antifungal therapy in patients with neutropenia
| Reference/type of study | Treatment regimen (dose) | Number of patients | Mean age (range) | Patient population (% of patients) | Mean duration of treatment | Renal toxicity | Infusion related reactions | Treatment success rate* (% of patients) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walsh | L-AmB (3 mg/k/d) | 343 | 41 (2–79) | HSCT: 45% | 10.8 days | 19% | 17% | 50.1% [95% CI: 45–56] | L-AMB was associated with significant reduction of breakthrough infections (mostly non- |
| Amb-D (0.6 mg/kg/d) | 344 | 42 (2–80) | HSCT: 47% | 10.3 days | 34% ( | 44% | 49.4% [95% CI: 44–55] | ||
| Wingard | L-AmB (3 mg/kg/d) | 85 | 41.4 (3–74) | HSCT: 46% | 8 days | 14.1% | 51.8% | 40% | Study designed to detect differences in toxicity, not efficacy. Breakthrough infection rates were similar in three groups. |
| L-AmB (5 mg/kg/d) | 81 | 42 (2–84) | HSCT: 49% | 8 days | 14.8% | 48.1% | 42% | ||
| ABLC (5 mg/kg/d) | 78 | 42.8 (2–76) | BMT: 51% | 8 days | 42.3% ( | 88.5% | 33.3% | ||
| Walsh | Voriconazole 6 mg/kg IV Q12 h on day 1, then 3 mg/kg IV Q12 h or 200 mg PO after at least 3 days of IV therapy | 415 | 46.3 (12–82) | HSCT: 47.7% | 7 days | With concomitant Nephrotoxic drugs | Abnormal vision 22% | 26% | Breakthrough IFI occurred in 8 patients on voriconazole and 21 patients on L-AmB ( |
| L-AmB (3 mg/kg/d) | 422 | 45 (12–80) | HSCT: 51.4% | 7 days | With concomitant Nephrotoxic drugs | Abnormal vision 0.7% | 30.6% | ||
| Walsh | Caspofungin (70 mg in day 1 and then 50 mg/d) | 556 | 51 (17–83) | Acute leukemia: 75.8% (Allo-HSCT: 6.5%) | 13 days | 2.6% | 47% | 33.9% | Most patients included in the study had acute leukemia. |
| L-AmB (3 mg/kg/d) | 539 | 49 (16–83) | Acute leukemia: 72.2% (Allo-HSCT: 7.2%) | 12.5 days | 11.5% ( | 59% ( | 33.7% | Breakthrough infections were similar in both groups. | |
| Maertens | Caspofungin (70 mg/m2 on day 1, then 50 mg/m2 daily) | 56 | 6 (2–16) | Acute leukemia: 60.7% (Allo-HSCT: 10.7%) | 11.6 days | 5.5% | 48.2% [95% CI: 34.7–62.0] | 46.6% [95% CI: 33.5–59.6] | Study conducted exclusively in pediatric population. |
| L-AmB (3 mg/kg/d) | 26 | 5.5 (2–16) | Acute leukemia: 65.4% (Allo-HSCT: 65.4%) | 11.4 days | 8% | 46.2% [95% CI: 26.6–66.6] | 32.2% [95% CI: 13.9–50.5] | Limitation: small sample. Only 1 patient in L-AmB group had breakthrough infection. |
Notes: Infusion related reactions include fevers, chills, hypotension, chest pain, tachycardia, etc;
nephrotoxic effect was defined by an elevation in the serum creatinine level to more than 1.5 times the base-line value;
treatment success rate was determined by a composite outcome score consisting of five criteria: (1) successful treatment of any baseline fungal infection, (2) absence of any breakthrough fungal infection during therapy or within seven days after the completion of therapy, (3) survival for 7 days after the completion of therapy, (4) no premature discontinuation of study therapy because of drug related toxicity or lack of efficacy, and (5) resolution of fever during neutropenia. Treatment was considered successful if all five criteria were met.
Infusion-related reactions on day 1 study drug infusion;
fevers within 1 hour of drug infusion (increase of ≥1.0°C); overall rate of infusion-related reactions was not provided;
nephrotoxic drugs were aminoglycosides, cyclosporine, and foscarnet.
Abbreviations: ABLC, amphotericin B lipid complex; AmB-D, amphotericin B deoxycolate; CI, confidence interval; L-AmB, liposomal amphotericin B; BMT, bone marrow transplant; Allo, allogeneic; HSCT, hematological stem cell transplant.