| Literature DB >> 31667696 |
Essack Mitha1, Gergely Krivan2, Frederique Jacobs3, Arnon Nagler4, Sally Alrabaa5, Analia Mykietiuk6, Andrew Kenwright7, Sophie Le Pogam8, Barry Clinch7, Loreta Vareikiene9.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Immunocompromised patients infected with influenza exhibit prolonged viral shedding and higher risk of resistance. Optimized treatment strategies are needed to reduce the risk of antiviral resistance. This phase IIIb, randomized, double-blind study (NCT00545532) evaluated conventional-dose or double-dose oseltamivir for the treatment of influenza in immunocompromised patients.Entities:
Keywords: Efficacy; Immunocompromised; Influenza; Oseltamivir; Phase IIIb; Resistance; Safety
Year: 2019 PMID: 31667696 PMCID: PMC6856247 DOI: 10.1007/s40121-019-00271-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Ther ISSN: 2193-6382
Fig. 1Disposition of patients (mITTi, adults and children combined). Intent-to-treat infected population: all patients randomized and with central laboratory confirmation of influenza infection, excluding patients infected with oseltamivir-resistant influenza at baseline. mITTi population: all patients randomized to a particular treatment, regardless of whether they received that treatment or not, and received at least one dose of study drug and with central laboratory confirmation of influenza infection, excluding patients infected with oseltamivir-resistant influenza at baseline. mITTi modified intent-to-treat infected
Baseline demographic and disease characteristics (safety population, adults and children)
| Characteristic | Conventional dose ( | Double dose | All patients |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, median (range), years | 44.0 (4–79) | 46.5 (5–90) | 45.0 (4–90) |
| Age groups in years, | |||
| 1–12 | 4 (3.8) | 5 (4.5) | 9 (4.2) |
| 13–17 | 3 (2.9) | 4 (3.6) | 7 (3.3) |
| 18–40 | 38 (36.2) | 31 (28.2) | 69 (32.1) |
| 41–64 | 50 (47.6) | 61 (55.5) | 111 (51.6) |
| ≥ 65 | 10 (9.5) | 9 (8.2) | 19 (8.8) |
| Male, | 48 (45.7) | 48 (43.6) | 96 (44.7) |
| Race, | |||
| White | 72 (68.6) | 72 (65.5) | 144 (67.0) |
| Black or African American | 27 (25.7) | 33 (30.0) | 60 (27.9) |
| American Indian or Alaskan Native | 6 (5.7) | 3 (2.7) | 9 (4.2) |
| Other | 0 | 2 (1.8) | 2 (0.9) |
| Received influenza vaccination, | |||
| Yes | 18 (17.1) | 20 (18.2) | 38 (17.7) |
| Immunosuppressive condition, | |||
| Transplant | 45 (42.9) | 43 (39.1) | 88 (40.9) |
| Solid organ transplant | 31 (29.5) | 25 (22.7) | 56 (26.0) |
| Hematopoietic stem cell transplant | 14 (13.3) | 18 (16.4) | 32 (14.9) |
| HIV (CD4 count < 500/mm3) | 42 (40.0) | 37 (33.6) | 79 (36.7) |
| Systemic immunosuppressive therapy | 23 (21.9) | 37 (33.6) | 60 (27.9) |
| Hematologic malignancies | 11 (10.5) | 15 (13.6) | 26 (12.1) |
| Time from onset of symptoms to start of drug, median (range), hours | 47 (12–94) | 54 (8–90) | 49 (8–94) |
Summary of AEs (safety-evaluable population)
| Number (%) of patients reporting AEs | Conventional dose | Double dose |
|---|---|---|
| Any AEa | 53 (50.5) | 65 (59.1) |
| Nausea | 10 (9.5) | 14 (12.7) |
| Diarrhea | 10 (9.5) | 12 (10.9) |
| Vomiting | 10 (9.5) | 12 (10.9) |
| Headache | 5 (4.8) | 12 (10.9) |
| Any SAE | 8 (7.6) | 10 (9.1) |
| Any AE leading to treatment discontinuation | 3 (2.9) | 6 (5.5) |
| Any AE leading to dose modification/interruption | 2 (1.9) | 0 |
| Deaths | 0 | 1 (0.9)b |
| Total number of AEs, | 158 | 228 |
AE adverse event, SAE adverse event
aMost common AEs by preferred term (reported by > 10% of patients in either group)
bRecurrence of pre-existing leukemia; unrelated to study medication
Post-baseline resistance development, according to resistance type, virus type, and patient type in the mITTi population
| Number (%) of patients with resistant virus detected | Conventional dose | Double dose | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adults | Children (< 18 years) ( | Adults | Children (< 18 years) ( | |
| Resistance type | ||||
| Any resistancea | 10/67 (15) | 2/6 (33) | 2/71 (3) | 1/8 (13) |
| Phenotypic | 6/62 (10) | 2/6 (33) | 1/62 (2) | 0/8 |
| Genotypic | 7/64 (11) | 2/5 (40) | 2/68 (3) | 1/8 (13) |
| Virus typeb | ||||
| A (H1N1pdm2009) | 4/16 (25) | 1/1 (100) | 1/13 (8) | 1/1 (100) |
| A (H1N1) | 1/2 (50) | 0/0 (0) | 0/1 (0) | 0/0 (0) |
| A (H3N2) | 3/29 (10) | 1/3 (33) | 1/33 (3) | 0/4 (0) |
| B | 2/20 (10) | 0/2 (0) | 0/24 (0) | 0/3 (0) |
| Patient typeb, c | ||||
| Hematopoietic stem cell transplant | 4/9 (44) | 1/2 (50) | 1/13 (8) | 0/0 (NE) |
| Solid organ transplantd | 4/25 (16) | NE | 1/22 (5) | NE |
| HIV infection | 0/21 (0) | 0/1 (0) | 0/20 (0) | 0/1 (0) |
| Systemic immunosuppressive immunotherapy | 3/17 (18) | 1/2 (50) | 1/26 (4) | 0/4 (0) |
| Hematologic malignancy | 2/8 (25) | 1/3 (33) | 0/11 (0) | 1/3 (33) |
mITTi modified intent-to-treat infected, NE not estimable
aPatients for whom both genotypic and phenotypic resistance were detected were counted only once in the overall resistance rate
bDenominators based on the overall resistance. In the eight A/H1N1-infected patients, the H274Y mutation (N2 numbering) was detected alone or in combination with the wild-type amino acid residue. In the five A/H3N2-infected patients, three had the R292 K mutation detected alone or in combination with the wild-type virus and the E119 V mutation in combination with the wild-type virus was detected in one patient. In the A/H3N2-infected patient, an outlier phenotype with a 5.6-fold increase in IC50 (from baseline mean) was observed at day 6; however, no genotypic resistance was detected in any post-baseline samples (day 2/3 and day 6)
cSome patients have more than one immunosuppressive condition
dAll received a kidney transplant
Fig. 2Evaluating the impact of treatment-emergent resistance on a time to cessation of viral shedding and b time to alleviation of symptoms (median [95% CI]; mITTi, adults only). All patients with baseline resistance were excluded from this analysis. *Patients who were still shedding virus (TTCVS)/symptomatic (TTAS) at end of study were censored from the analysis. CI confidence interval, mITTi modified intent-to-treat infected, TTAS time to symptom alleviation, TTCVS time to cessation of viral shedding
| Oseltamivir is approved for the treatment of influenza in adults and children aged > 1 year in Europe and the United States, but there is concern about the development of oseltamivir resistance in immunosuppressed patients. |
| As data from prospective, randomized studies of oseltamivir in immunocompromised patients are limited, we conducted a randomized phase IIIb study to evaluate the safety and tolerability of conventional-dose versus double-dose oseltamivir for the treatment of influenza in immunocompromised adults and children (> 1 year). |
| Oseltamivir was well tolerated, with a trend toward a better safety/tolerability profile for conventional-dosing versus double-dosing in this immunocompromised patient population. |
| This study, being the largest prospective study of a broad immunocompromised population and including the types of patients recommended for treatment in various national guidelines, serves to support long-standing recommendations for the use of oseltamivir in immunocompromised populations. |