| Literature DB >> 32514626 |
Jannik Stemler1,2,3, Philipp Koehler1,2, Christian Maurer1, Carsten Müller4, Oliver A Cornely5,6,7,8.
Abstract
With the advent of new targeted drugs in hematology and oncology patient prognosis is improved. Combination with antifungal prophylaxis challenges clinicians due to pharmacological profiles prone to drug-drug interactions (DDI). Midostaurin is a novel agent for FLT3-TKD/-ITDmut-acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and metabolized via cytochrome P450 3A4 (CYP3A4). Posaconazole is a standard of care antifungal agent used for prophylaxis during induction treatment of AML and a strong CYP3A4 inhibitor. Concomitant administration of both drugs leads to elevated midostaurin exposure. Both drugs improve overall survival at low numbers needed to treat. The impact of CYP3A4-related DDI remains to be determined. Severe adverse events have been observed; however, it remains unclear if they can be directly linked to DDI. The lack of prospective clinical studies assessing incidence of invasive fungal infections and clinical impact of DDI contributes to neglecting live-saving antifungal prophylaxis. Management strategies to combine both drugs have been proposed, but evidence on which approach to use is scarce. In this review, we discuss several approaches in the specific clinical setting of concomitant administration of midostaurin and posaconazole and give examples from everyday clinical practice. Therapeutic drug monitoring will become increasingly important to individualize and personalize antineoplastic concomitant and antifungal treatment in the context of DDI. Pharmaceutical companies addressing the issue in clinical trials may take a pioneer role in this field. Other recently developed and approved drugs for the treatment of AML likely inhere potential of DDI marking a foreseeable issue in future treatment of this life-threatening disease.Entities:
Keywords: Blood levels; Personalized medicine; Protein kinase inhibitor; Targeted therapy; Therapeutic drug monitoring
Year: 2020 PMID: 32514626 PMCID: PMC7316674 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-020-04107-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673
Selected adverse events of midostaurin and management [16]
| Adverse event | Proposed management |
|---|---|
| Nausea/vomiting | Administration with food Administration with antiemetic |
| QTc prolongation | Electrocardiogram monitoring Maintain potassium and magnesium within normal limits |
Interstitial lung disease and pneumonitis Pleural effusion Pulmonary hemorrhage | Monitor closely for pulmonary symptoms Discontinue midostaurin in patients who develop symptoms of interstitial lung disease |
QTc corrected QTc interval
Selected antifungals, CYP3A4 impact, and clinical considerations [33, 39–42]
| Antifungal agent | CYP3A4 impact | Clinical considerations for antifungal prophylaxis |
|---|---|---|
| Posaconazole [ | Strong inhibition | QTc prolongation Oral solution associated with low absorption and plasma level variation, TDM recommended Hepatic toxicity |
| Isavuconazole [ | Moderate inhibition | QTc shortening Hepatic toxicity higher rate of breakthrough fungal infections when used for prophylaxis [ |
| Voriconazole [ | Strong inhibition | QTc prolongation Vision changes Hepatic toxicity Hallucinations Long-term use associated with skin cancer |
| Micafungin [ | Minor substrate | Well tolerated Only available intravenously Limited efficacy against molds |
| Caspofungin [ | Minor substrate | Well tolerated Only available intravenously Limited efficacy against molds |
CYP3A4 cytochrome p450 3A4 enzyme, QTc corrected QT interval, TDM therapeutic drug monitoring, i.v. intravenous
Strategies for clinical use of antifungal prophylaxis in AML patients treated with midostaurin
| Scenario/strategy | Pro | Contra | Recommendation by the authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Administration of recommended dosage of midostaurin as of package insert and standard dosage antifungal prophylaxis with posaconazole. Monitor patient closely for AE(s). | - Antileukemic activity of midostaurin as assessed in clinical trials is assured | - Close monitoring of AEs (e.g., frequent ECG controls, clinical evaluation of pulmonary function) must be warranted [ - Increased risk of midostaurin-related AE(s) is given | Moderately recommended This approach detects potential toxicity-related AE late |
| 2. Dose reduction of midostaurin to ~ 50% during induction treatment while posaconazole is administered. | - Risk of early onset of AEs and generally AEs is most likely omitted | - Antileukemic activity of midostaurin is not warranted as assessed in clinical trials - Midostaurin dosage increase must be guaranteed when posaconazole is stopped - Non-adherence to azole prophylaxis or altered pharmacokinetics lead to low midostaurin exposure | Marginally recommended This approach potentially restricts the therapeutic effect of midostaurin while not providing efficacy monitoring |
| 3. Switch antifungal prophylaxis to EC or other triazoles (Fluconazole, Itraconazole, Isavuconazole). | - EC do not exhibit a significant CYP3A4 inhibition - Isavuconazole shortens the QTc interval [ - Isavuconazole: safe and effective [ | - Limited power studies/transferred evidence of efficacy and safety for other antifungals from other patient populations available [ - Fluconazole/Itraconazole proved to be inferior in antifungal prophylaxis [ - EC: administration only via i.v. route/minor penetration to central nervous system [ - Isavuconazole: not available for low resource settings/cost | Marginally recommended Other antifungal agents than posaconazole have been proven inferior or provide similar CYP3A4 effects |
| 4. Continue with recommended dosage of midostaurin and posaconazole as of package insert and measure drug levels via TDM of both drugs regularly. | - Determination of plasma/serum levels allows monitoring of prophylactic effectiveness of posaconazole and antileukemic activity of midostaurin [ - Dose adaption according to measured level of midostaurin allows individualized dosage | - TDM method for determination of metabolites (CGP6221 and CGP52421) levels not yet available | Strongly recommended TDM allows close therapy monitoring and individualized dosing in the future. This strategy reflects the “Cologne approach”. |
AE adverse event, EC echinocandins, ECG electrocardiogram, TDM therapeutic drug monitoring