| Literature DB >> 33139867 |
Yasuo Mori1, Fumiaki Jinnouchi1, Katsuto Takenaka1,2, Takatoshi Aoki3, Takuro Kuriyama4, Masanori Kadowaki5, Jun Odawara6, Toshiyuki Ueno7, Kentaro Kohno8, Takuya Harada1, Goichi Yoshimoto1, Ken Takase5, Hideho Henzan4, Koji Kato1, Yoshikiyo Ito6, Tomohiko Kamimura3, Yuju Ohno7, Ryosuke Ogawa8, Tetsuya Eto4, Koji Nagafuji9, Koichi Akashi1, Toshihiro Miyamoto10.
Abstract
A novel anti-cytomegalovirus (CMV) agent, letermovir (LMV), could reportedly improve the outcomes of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT) recipients because of its high potential to prevent CMV reactivation. Therefore, 685 Japanese allo-HCT recipients, of whom ~80% had a high risk of CMV reactivation, were retrospectively analyzed to assess the impacts of prophylactic LMV on the incidence of clinically significant CMV (csCMV) infection as well as their transplant outcome. By comparing 114 patients who received LMV prophylaxis for a median 92 days to 571 patients without prophylaxis, we observed that prophylactic LMV could significantly (1) reduce the 180-day cumulative incidence of csCMV infection (44.7 vs. 72.4%, p < 0.001), (2) delay the median time until initiation of CMV antigenemia-guided preemptive therapy (90 vs. 36 days, p < 0.001), (3) shorten the duration of anti-CMV preemptive treatment (21 vs. 25 days, p = 0.006), and (4) improve the overall survival rate at 180 days after transplant (80.4 vs. 73.0%, p = 0.033) with a trend of lower non-relapse mortality (8.9 vs. 14.9%, p = 0.052). Our findings demonstrate that prophylactic LMV treatment is highly effective in preventing the development of csCMV infection and ultimately reduces transplant-related mortality.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33139867 DOI: 10.1038/s41409-020-01082-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bone Marrow Transplant ISSN: 0268-3369 Impact factor: 5.483