| Literature DB >> 35336015 |
Kévin Brunet1,2,3, Jean-Philippe Martellosio1,2,4, Frédéric Tewes1,2, Sandrine Marchand1,2,5, Blandine Rammaert1,2,4.
Abstract
Pulmonary mold infections are life-threatening diseases with high morbi-mortalities. Treatment is based on systemic antifungal agents belonging to the families of polyenes (amphotericin B) and triazoles. Despite this treatment, mortality remains high and the doses of systemic antifungals cannot be increased as they often lead to toxicity. The pulmonary aerosolization of antifungal agents can theoretically increase their concentration at the infectious site, which could improve their efficacy while limiting their systemic exposure and toxicity. However, clinical experience is poor and thus inhaled agent utilization remains unclear in term of indications, drugs, and devices. This comprehensive literature review aims to describe the pharmacokinetic behavior and the efficacy of inhaled antifungal drugs as prophylaxes and curative treatments both in animal models and humans.Entities:
Keywords: aerosol; animal model; antifungal drugs; antifungal prophylaxis; invasive fungal disease
Year: 2022 PMID: 35336015 PMCID: PMC8949245 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14030641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Guidelines for the use of nebulized AmB in treatment for invasive mold infections in lung transplant recipients.
| Ref | Type of IFD | n-AmB | Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patterson, 2016 [ | TBA in lung transplants associated with anastomotic endobronchial ischemia or ischemic reperfusion injury due to airway ischemia | Adjunctive inhaled AmB is recommended in association with a systemic antimold antifungal (strong recommendation; moderate-quality evidence). | “No consistent evidence” |
| Husain, 2016 [ | TBA | n-AmB alone is not recommended as a primary treatment of TBA (C-III). Although it has been proposed as an adjunctive therapy in an endobronchial prothesis infection, more evidence is needed. | Morales, 2009 [ |
| IPA | Addition of n-AmB to a standard regimen of treatment is not routinely recommended (C-III). However, the authors also declare that n-AmB could be used in combination with voriconazole/other systemic antifungal drugs, depending on the severity of IFD, or possibly in situations in which large cavitary lesions might render the penetration of systemic agents difficult. | Additional evidence would be helpful | |
| Husain, 2019 [ | TBA associated with anastomotic endo-bronchial ischemia, or ischemic reperfusion injury due to airway ischemia associated with lung | Inhaled AmB (in conjunction with systemic antifungal therapy) may be used (weak; low). |
Guidelines for prophylactic use of nebulized AmB in hematological patients.
| Ref | Criteria | n-AmBd | n-L-AmB |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mellinghoff, 2018 [ | Neutrophils < 500/mm3, >7 days. (AlloSCT and ALL excluded) | Recommendation against its use (D-I) | Recommended B-II (second choice after posaconazole) |
| Patterson, 2016 [ | Prolonged neutropenia (induction/reinduction therapy for AL, and alloSCT recipients following conditioning or during treatment of GVHD) | n-AmB may be considered (weak recommendation; low-quality evidence) | |
| Ullman, 2018 [ | Prolonged and profound neutropenia | Not mentioned | Recommended B-I (second choice after posaconazole) |
| AlloSCT recipients until neutrophil recovery | Not mentioned | Recommended B-II (ex-aqueous first choice with posaconazole) | |
| Maertens, 2018 [ | Induction AML/MDS | Recommendation against its use (A-I) | Recommended B-I (second choice after posaconazole) |
| AlloSCT with high-risk mold infection | Not recommended if low incidence of mold infections (<5%), recommended B-II (third choice) if high incidence of mold infections (>5%) | ||
AlloSCT: allogeneic stem cell transplantation; ALL: acute lymphoblastic leukemia; AML: acute myeloid leukemia; MDS: myelodysplastic syndrome; AmB: amphotericin B; n-AmB: nebulized AmB; AmBd: deoxycholate AmB; L-AmB: liposomal AmB.
Guidelines for prophylactic use of nebulized AmB in lung transplant recipients.
| Ref | Criteria | n-AmBd | n-AmB Lipid Formulation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Husain, 2016 [ | Lung transplant recipients | n-AmB ± fluconazole or an echinocandin should be used in the first 2–4 weeks post-transplantation (B-I) | |
| Patterson, 2016 [ | Lung transplant recipients | n-AmB may be considered (weak recommendation; low-quality evidence) | |
| Ullman, 2018 [ | Lung transplant recipients | B-II | Recommended A-I (first choice) |
| Heart transplant recipients | n-AmB universal prophylaxis is recommended in second choice (C-I). First choice is targeted prophylaxis with echinocandins | ||
| Husain and Camargo, | Lung transplant recipients | AmBd 20 mg × 3/d or 25 mg/d (weak; low) | ABLC 50 mg 1×/2d for 2 w., then 1×/w for 13 w. (week; low) |
| Heart transplant recipients | Not cited | ||
AmB: amphotericin B; n-AmB: nebulized AmB; AmBd: deoxycholate AmB; L-AmB: liposomal AmB; SOT: solid organ transplantation; AEs: adverse events.