| Literature DB >> 23442261 |
Helen Y Chu, Rupali Jain, Hu Xie, Paul Pottinger, David N Fredricks.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Voriconazole is approved for treatment of invasive aspergillosis and other invasive fungal infections, but the role for therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) is not clear.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23442261 PMCID: PMC3655856 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-13-105
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of patients receiving voriconazole TDM between 2007-2009
| Number of patients | 108 |
| Median Age (IQR) | 53 (38–64) |
| Sex, % male | 59 (54.6%) |
| | |
| Hematopoietic stem cell transplant | 47 (43.5%) |
| Hematologic malignancy without a stem cell transplant | 37 (34.3%) |
| Solid organ transplantation | 10 (9.3%) |
| Other condition | 9 (8.3%) |
| None | 3 (2.8%) |
| | |
| Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis | 83 (76.8%) |
| Invasive sinus or CNS aspergillosis | 5 (4.6%) |
| Invasive candidal infection | 9 (8.3%) |
| Other invasive fungal infectionδ | 13 (12.0%) |
| Febrile neutropenia | 9 (8.3%) |
| | |
| Proven or probable invasive fungal disease | 46 (42.5%) |
| Possible invasive fungal disease | 43 (39.8%) |
| | |
| Subtherapeutic (<1.0 mg/L) | 32 (29.6%) |
| Therapeutic (1.0-5.5 mg/L) | 64 (59.2%) |
| Supratherapeutic (>5.5 mg/L) | 12 (11.1%) |
*Sixteen patients received voriconazole therapy for more than one indication.
δ Other fungal organisms included Fusarium (n = 2), Absidia (n = 1), Alternaria (n = 1), Saccharomyces (n = 1), Scedosporium (n = 1), Ascomyctes (n = 1), Rhizopus (n = 1), Pseudoallescheria (n = 1), and Paecilomyces (n = 1).
Voriconazole dosing characteristics, drug level monitoring, and duration of therapy
| Voriconazole serial drug levels (mg/L) | |
| Initial drug level (n = 108) | 2.35 [0.7, 3.8] |
| Second drug level (n = 51) | 2.00 [0.5, 3.5] |
| Third drug level (n = 26) | 1.35 [0.6, 7.7] |
| Voriconazole loading dose (mg/dose; n = 59) | 400 [350, 480] |
| Voriconazole maintenance dose (mg/dose; n = 107) | 260 [200,300] |
| Patient weight (kg; n = 107) | 71.3 [60.5, 85.8] |
| Duration of voriconazole therapy in days (n = 85) | 35 [13, 92] |
| Days between initiation of voriconazole to first drug level (n = 100) | 11 [3,164] |
| Hours between last dose and trough drug level (n = 64) | 11.3 [8.9-12.0] |
Figure 1Comparison of median voriconazole drug levels. Median voriconazole drug level did not vary by first, second or third drug level among patients who received serial drug level monitoring (P = 0.55).
Figure 2Comparison of voriconazole initial drug level by weight-adjusted dosage received. Initial drug level did not correlate with weight-adjusted dosage of voriconazole (r2 = 0.01; n = 107). Area between the horizontal lines indicates the therapeutic range between 1.0 and 5.5 mg/L.
The relationship between voriconazole initial drug levels and clinical and radiologic response to therapy at 6 and 12 weeks of follow-up
| Intravenous maintenance dose administration | 11 (35.4%) | 26 (36.1%) | 1.02 [0.39-2.77] | 0.95† |
| Voriconazole median dosage (mg) | 280 (170–400) | 255 (125–480) | -- | 0.61‡ |
| | | | | |
| Complete or partial response (n = 13) | 7/13 (53.8%) | 6/33 (18.2%) | 0.19 [0.04-0.96] | 0.03 § |
| Progression of disease (n = 9) | 1/13 (7.7%) | 8/33 (24.2%) | 3.84 [0.42-184.3] | 0.41 § |
| | | | | |
| Complete or partial response (n = 22) | 9/13 (69.2%) | 13/33 (39.4%) | 0.29 [0.05-1.34] | 0.10 § |
| Progression of disease (n = 11) | 3/13 (23.1%) | 8/33 (24.2%) | 1.07 [0.20-7.50] | 1.00 § |
| | | | | |
| Pulmonary nodule resolution or decrease in size at 6 weeks (n = 46) | 4 (30.8%) | 13 (39.4%) | 1.46 [0.32-7.83] | 0.74 § |
* In patients with proven or probable invasive fungal disease (n = 46).
† Chi-squared test.
‡ Two-sample t-test.
§ Fisher’s exact test.
Figure 3Cumulative incidence graph comparing therapy response with therapeutic versus subtherapeutic initial drug levels shows no statistically significant difference in complete or partial response to therapy at 12 weeks among a subset of patients with proven or probable invasive fungal disease (n = 46; HR: 0.45; = 0.07).
The relationship between supratherapeutic voriconazole drug levels during therapy and adverse drug events
| 36 (39.1%) | 9 (56.3%) | 2.00 [0.60-6.89] | |
| | | | |
| Encephalopathy | 15 (16.3%) | 6 (37.5%) | 3.08 [0.79-11.0] |
| LFT abnormalities (AST/ALT > 5x ULN, Alk phos/bili >3x ULN) | 11 (12.0%) | 4 (25.0%) | 2.45 [0.49-10.1] |
| Acute renal failure (creatinine rise ≥ 0.3 mg/L in 48 hours)§ | 4 (4.3%) | 4 (25.0%) | 7.33 [1.17-43.8] |
| Visual changes | 5 (5.4%) | 0 (0%) | -- |
| Drug rash | 6 (6.5%) | 1 (6.3%) | 0.96 [0.02-8.81] |
*For at least one month after initiation of therapy.
†Fisher’s exact test.
§Baseline creatinine 1.1 in 4 subjects with therapeutic levels, and 1.3 in 4 subjects with supratherapeutic levels, all with eventual acute renal failure.
Figure 4Comparison of frequency of adverse drug events in patients with and without supratherapeutic drug levels, defined as a level > 5.5 mg/L. The y-axis represents the percentage of patients with adverse drug events. The total number of adverse drug events, as well as individual drug events, are noted on the x-axis. There was no statistically significant difference in the frequency of overall adverse drug events, or of encephalopathy, hepatoxicity, skin rash, or visual changes among patients with and without supratherapeutic voriconazole drug levels. There was a statistically significant difference in incidence of acute renal failure (*) between the two groups.