| Literature DB >> 29218389 |
Sibylle C Mellinghoff1,2, Jens Panse3, Nael Alakel4, Gerhard Behre5, Dieter Buchheidt6, Maximilian Christopeit7, Justin Hasenkamp8, Michael Kiehl9, Michael Koldehoff10, Stefan W Krause11, Nicola Lehners12, Marie von Lilienfeld-Toal13, Annika Y Löhnert14, Georg Maschmeyer15, Daniel Teschner16, Andrew J Ullmann17, Olaf Penack18, Markus Ruhnke19, Karin Mayer20, Helmut Ostermann21, Hans-H Wolf22, Oliver A Cornely23,14,24.
Abstract
Immunocompromised patients are at high risk of invasive fungal infections (IFI), in particular those with haematological malignancies undergoing remission-induction chemotherapy for acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) or myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and recipients of allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplants (HSCT). Despite the development of new treatment options in the past decades, IFI remains a concern due to substantial morbidity and mortality in these patient populations. In addition, the increasing use of new immune modulating drugs in cancer therapy has opened an entirely new spectrum of at risk periods. Since the last edition of antifungal prophylaxis recommendations of the German Society for Haematology and Medical Oncology in 2014, seven clinical trials regarding antifungal prophylaxis in patients with haematological malignancies have been published, comprising 1227 patients. This update assesses the impact of this additional evidence and effective revisions. Our key recommendations are the following: prophylaxis should be performed with posaconazole delayed release tablets during remission induction chemotherapy for AML and MDS (AI). Posaconazole iv can be used when the oral route is contraindicated or not feasible. Intravenous liposomal amphotericin B did not significantly decrease IFI rates in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) patients during induction chemotherapy, and there is poor evidence to recommend it for prophylaxis in these patients (CI). Despite substantial risk of IFI, we cannot provide a stronger recommendation for these patients. There is poor evidence regarding voriconazole prophylaxis in patients with neutropenia (CII). Therapeutic drug monitoring TDM should be performed within 2 to 5 days of initiating voriconazole prophylaxis and should be repeated in case of suspicious adverse events or of dose changes of interacting drugs (BIItu). General TDM during posaconazole prophylaxis is not recommended (CIItu), but may be helpful in cases of clinical failure such as breakthrough IFI for verification of compliance or absorption.Entities:
Keywords: Amphotericin B; Antifungal prophylaxis; Fluconazole; Invasive fungal infection; Isavuconazole; Itraconazole; Liposomal; Posaconazole
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29218389 PMCID: PMC5754425 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-017-3196-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673
ESCMID-ECMM Grading 2017
| Category, grade | Definition | |
|---|---|---|
| Strength of recommendation | A | Strongly supports a recommendation for use |
| B | Moderate evidence to support a recommendation for use | |
| C | Poor evidence to support a recommendation | |
| D | Supports a recommendation against use | |
| Quality of evidence—level | I | Evidence from ≥ 1 properly randomised controlled trial |
| II | Evidence from ≥ 1 well-designed clinical trial, without randomisation; from cohort or case-controlled analytic studies (preferably from > 1 centre); from multiple time series; or from dramatic results from uncontrolled experiments | |
| III | Evidence from opinions of respected authorities, based on clinical experience, descriptive studies or reports of expert committees | |
| Quality of evidence—index (for level II) | r | Meta-analysis or systematic review of randomised controlled trials |
| t | Transferred evidence, that is, results from different patients’ cohorts, or similar immune-status situation | |
| h | Comparator group is a historical control | |
| u | Uncontrolled trial | |
| a | Published abstract (presented at an international symposium or meeting) | |
Recommended antifungal prophylaxis in patients with neutropenia (< 500 cells/μL > 7 days)
| Intention | Intervention | SoR | QoE |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prevent IFI in patients with neutropenia (< 500 cells/μL > 7 days), excluding alloSCTa | Posaconazole | A | Ib |
| B | IIIc | ||
| Amphotericin B, liposomal, inhalation | B | IId | |
| Amphotericin B, liposomal, iv | C | I | |
| Caspofungin | C | I | |
| Fluconazole | C | I | |
| Itraconazole | C | I | |
| Itraconazole, iv | C | I | |
| Voriconazole | C | II | |
| Amphotericin B deoxycholate | D | I | |
| Micafungin | C | IIh | |
| Isavuconazole | C | IIu |
aCurrently, no recommendations for ALL patients applicable
bStrong recommendation in AML/MDS remission induction chemotherapy only
cOther settings, e.g. very severe aplastic anaemia and palliative treatment of MDS
dAll patients received fluconazole—dose and route were not reported
Dosage of recommended drugs (please refer to Table 2)
| Drug | Dosage |
|---|---|
| Posaconazole, oral suspension | 200 mg tid po |
| Posaconazole, tablet | 300 mg qd po (bid on day 1) |
| Posaconazole, iv | 300 mg/day iv (bid on day 1) |
| Amphotericin B, liposomal, inhalation | 12.5 mg biw |
| Amphotericin B, liposomal, iv | 50 mg q 48 h or 5 mg/kg biw (CI) |
| Caspofungin | 50 mg qd iv |
| Fluconazole | 400 mg qd po |
| Itraconazole, capsules | Any dose |
| Itraconazole, oral solution | 2.5–7.5 mg/kg/day or 200 mg |
| Itraconazole, iv | 200 mg qd iv |
| Voriconazole | 200 mg bid iv |
| Amphotericin B deoxycholate | Any dose |
| Micafungin | 50 mg iv |
| Isavuconazole | 200 mg/d iv (tid on days 1–2) |
Recommendations on therapeutic drug monitoring during antifungal prophylaxis
| Intention | Intervention | SoR | QoE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drug | Target level | |||
| Achieve exposure effective for antifungal prophylaxis and reduce toxicity | Voriconazole | 1–2 mg/L | B | IItu |
| Posaconazole | > 500 ng/ml | C | IItu | |