| Literature DB >> 35887431 |
Nadir Ullah1, Chiara Sepulcri1,2, Malgorzata Mikulska1,2.
Abstract
Isavuconazole is a broad-spectrum antifungal drug recently approved as a first-line treatment for invasive aspergillosis and as a first or alternative treatment for mucormycosis. The purpose of this review was to report and discuss the use of isavuconazole for the treatment of COVID-19-associated aspergillosis (CAPA), and COVID-19-associated mucormycosis (CAM). Among all studies which reported treatment of CAPA, approximately 10% of patients were reportedly treated with isavuconazole. Considering 14 identified studies that reported the use of isavuconazole for CAPA, isavuconazole was used in 40% of patients (95 of 235 treated patients), being first-line monotherapy in over half of them. We identified six studies that reported isavuconazole use in CAM, either alone or in combination therapy. Overall, isavuconazole was used as therapy in 13% of treated CAM patients, frequently as combination or sequential therapy. The use of isavuconazole in CAPA and CAM is complicated by the challenge of achieving adequate exposure in COVID-19 patients who are frequently obese and hospitalized in the ICU with concomitant renal replacement therapy (RRT) or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). The presence of data on high efficacy in the treatment of aspergillosis, lower potential for drug-drug interactions (DDIs) and for subtherapeutic levels, and no risk of QT prolongation compared to other mold-active azoles, better safety profile than voriconazole, and the possibility of using an intravenous formulation in the case of renal failure are the advantages of using isavuconazole in this setting.Entities:
Keywords: CAM; CAPA; COVID-19; ECMO; RRT; TDM; aspergillosis; invasive fungal infection; isavuconazole; mucormycosis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35887431 PMCID: PMC9323932 DOI: 10.3390/jof8070674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
MIC50, MIC90, ECOFF, and breakpoint values (mg/L) for isavuconazole and comparators.
| Study, Species | Isavuconazole | Voriconazole | Posaconazole | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MIC50, | ECOFF/R Breakpoint | MIC50, | ECOFF/R Breakpoint | MIC50, | ECOFF/R Breakpoint | |
| Pfaller et al., 2021 [ | ||||||
| 0.5, 1 | 2/>2 | 0.5, 0.5 | 1/>1 | 0.25, 0.5 | 0.25/>0.25 | |
| 0.5, 1 | 2/>2 | 0.5, 1 | 2/- | 0.25, 0.5 | 0.5/- | |
| 0.5, 4 | 4/- | 1, 1 | 2/- | 0.5, 1 | 0.5/- | |
| 2, ND | 1/>2 | 0.25, 0.25 | 2/- | 0.25, 0.25 | 0.25/>0.25 | |
| 0.03, ND | 0.25/>0.25 | 0.12, 0.25 | 1/>1 | 0.25, 0.5 | 0.5/- | |
| Astvad et al., 2017 [ | ||||||
| 1, ND | 2/>2 | 0.5, ND | 1/>1 | ND | 0.25 > 0.25 | |
| 2, ND | 4/- | 1, ND | 2/- | ND | 0.5/ND | |
| 1, ND | 1/>2 | 1, ND | 2/- | ND | 0.25/>0.25 | |
| 1, ND | 2/>2 | 1, ND | 2/- | ND | 0.5/- | |
Abbreviations: ECOFFs, epidemiologic cut-off value; EUCAST, European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing; MIC50, Minimum Inhibitory Concentration required to inhibit the growth of 50% of organisms; MIC90, Minimum Inhibitory Concentration required to inhibit the growth of 90% of organisms; ISA, isavuconazole; ND, no data; POSA, posaconazole; VORI, voriconazole; -, not defined.
Fourteen studies which reported patients with CAPA in whom isavuconazole treatment was used.
| References | Country | Total No of Patients with CAPA | No of the Patients Who Received Antifungal Treatment | Treated with ISA Monotherapy | Treated with VORI Monotherapy | Treated with L-AmB Monotherapy | Other Antifungals in Monotherapy | Combined or Sequential Treatment | Outcome in ISA-Treated Patients |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Falces et al., 2020 [ | Spain | 10 | 8 | None | 2/8 (25%) | None | 2/8 (25%) AmB | VORI + CASP in 1 | No data |
| Gangneux et al., 2020 [ | France | 9 | 7 | All treated with VORI or ISA, no further details | None | None | None | No data | |
| Rutsaert et al., 2020 [ | Belgium | 7 | 6 | 2/6 (33%) | 4/6 (67%) | None | None | None | 2/6 patients died; no data on which treatment they received |
| Koehler et al., 2020 [ | Germany | 5 | 5 | 1/5 (20%) | 2/5 (40%) | None | 2/5 CASP followed by VORI | None | The only patient treated with ISA died, no cause of death provided |
| Antinori et al., 2020 [ | Italy | 1 | 1 | 1/1 (100%) | None | None | None | - | Died soon after starting treatment |
| Prattes et al., 2021 [ | Europe, USA, Pakistan | 109 | 99 | 36/99 (36%) * | 52/99 (53%) | 17/99 (17%) | POSA 4/99 (4%), Echinocandins 13/99 (13%), Deoxycholate AmB 3/99 (3%) | 18/99 (18%) VORI or ISA combined with echinocandin or L-AmB | No data |
| Lahmer et al., 2021 [ | Germany | 11 | 11 | 1/11 (9%) | 5/11 (45%) | 5/11 (45%) | None | None | No data for ISA treated patient |
| Hatzl et al., 2021 [ | Austria | 9 | 9 | 3/9 (33%) | None | None | 6/9 (67%) POSA | None | No data for 3 ISA treated patients |
| Fekkar et al., 2021 [ | France | 7 | 6 | None | None | None | CASP | VORI + CASP in 3 | Success in the single patient who received |
| Paramythiotou et al., 2021 [ | Greece | 6 | 6 | 5/6 (83%) | None | None | CASP | Sequential treatment CASP > L-AmB in 1 | Two patients alive at the last follow up and still on ISA treatment, 3 patients died, mainly due to MDR |
| Machado et al., 2021 [ | Spain | 8 | 5 | 4/5 (80%) | None | 1/5 (20%) | None | None | All 5 died due to CAPA |
| Wasylyshyn et al., 2021 [ | UK | 3 | 2 | None | None | None | None | Sequential treatment VORI > ISA in both | Both ISA treated patients alive at 12 weeks. |
| Gangneux et al., 2022 [ | France | 76 | 58 (76%) | 11/58 (19%) *° | 44/58 (76%) | 20/58 (28%) | CASP 16 (28%), unspecified 5 (9%) | 29/58 more than one type | No data |
| de Almeida et al., 2022 [ | Brazil | 14 | 12 | None | 8/12 (%) | 1/12 (%) | - | 2 days of L-AmB + ISA, followed by ISA in 1 | The only patient treated with a combination containing ISA: died on day 19 after diagnosis of CAPA; no direct cause of death provided |
* changes or sequential therapy details not available; ° not specified if all given in monotherapy. Abbreviations: ANID, anidulafungin; AmB, amphotericin B; CASP, caspofungin; ISA, isavuconazole; L-AmB, liposomal amphotericin B; MICA, micafungin; POSA, posaconazole; UK, United Kingdom; USA, United States of America; VORI, voriconazole.
Studies reporting patients with CAM in whom isavuconazole treatment was used.
| References | Country | Total No of Patients with CAM | No of the Patients Who Received Antifungal Treatment | Treated with ISA Monotherapy | Treated with (L-) AmB Monotherapy | Treated with POSA Monotherapy | Other Antifungals Monotherapy | Combined Treatment | Outcome in ISA-Treated Patients |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patel et al., 2021 [ | India | 187 | 187 | 19/187 (10%) *° | 136/187 (73%) *° | 73/187 (39%) *° | AmB 31/187 (17%) *° | Single antifungal 95/187; | No such data was provided on patients’ responses to ISA. However, survival rate was high when patients were receiving antifungal drugs concurrent, sequential, and medical surgery |
| Hoenigl et al., 2021 [ | 18 Countries | 80 | 79 | 3/79 | 54/79 (68%) *° | 6/79 (8%) *° | CASP, VORI and MICA | Antifungal combination 14/79 | |
| Arjun et al., 2021 [ | India | 10 | 10 | 1 (10%) | 6 (30%) L-AmB or d-AmB | None | None | L-AmB + ISA in 1; | All the three ISA-treated patients were improved and discharged |
| Buil et al., 2021 [ | The Netherlands | 4 | 4 | None | None | None | None | VORI (days 0–13); L-AmB (from day 13); | Two patients received combined treatment of ISA and L-AmB, and died due to CAM |
| Danion et al., 2022 [ | France | 17 | 12 | 2/12 (17%) | 10/12 (83%) | None | None | No combination treatment | One patient was alive after receiving 3 months treatment of ISA and one died, no cause of death provided |
| Seidel et al., 2022 [ | Germany | 13 | 12 | 3/12 (25%) | 2/12 (17%) | None | Echinocandin 1/12 (8%) | ISA + L-AmB + VORI in 3; | No data |
* changes or sequential therapy details not available; ° not specified if all given in monotherapy. Abbreviations: AmB, amphotericin B; ANID, anidulafungin; CAM, COVID-19-associated mucormycosis; CASP, caspofungin; d-AmB, deoxycholate amphotericin B; INF-γ, interferon gamma; ISA, isavuconazole; L-AmB, liposomal amphotericin B; MICA, micafungin; POSA, posaconazole; VORI, voriconazole.
Main studies reporting the experience with TDM of isavuconazole.
| References | Patients’ Underlying Condition (Number) | Total No. of Patients | No. of Measurements | Mean/Median, | Min–Max, | Subtherapeutic Levels | Potentially Supratherapeutic Levels | Safety: No. of Patients with Side Effects | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Furfaro et al., 2019 [ | HM (13); other (6) | 19 | 264 | Median 3.6; median 2.86 during the first 14 days; | 0.64–8.13 | ND | ND | 6 (31.6%) gastrointestinal | Failure in 1 with concentration of 1.55 |
| Kosmidis et al., 2020 [ | Chronic pulmonary aspergillosis | 45 | 285 | Overall mean 4.1; mean 4.6 if dose 200 mg/day; | 1.1–10.1 | <1 mg/L in none of the patients | >6 mg/L in 36 (13%) | 16 (36%) discounted ISA due to side effects (5 within 28 days) such as hepatotoxicity in 4, neuropathy in 3, headache in 2, malaise in 2, weight loss in 1, confusion in 1, nausea in 1, photosensitivity in 1 case, dysgeusia in 1 | 38 patients (86%) were started on a standard dose |
| Borman et al., 2020 [ | ND | 150 | 210 | Mean 3.32 | 0.5–11.6 | <1 mg/L in 6 (4%), patients | ND | ND | In patients <18 years greater interpatient variability of blood levels was found |
| Zurl et al., 2020 [ | HM (14), SOT (4), cancer (2), other (12), including osteomyelitis | 33 | 140 | Median 2.35 | 0.66–9.1 | Only in case of RRT, ECMO, or Cytosorb use | ND | 6 (18%) developed side effects: 1 anaphylaxis, 1 leukopenia, 2 increased liver enzymes, 1 paraesthesia, 1 erythema, and elevated liver enzymes | Lower concentration in case of RRT (median 0.91 in 7 patients), ECMO, and Cytosorb® |
| McCreary et al., 2020 [ | SOT (18), HSCT (1) treated with ISA via enteral feeding tube | 19 | ND | Mean 1.8 | 0.3–5.2 | <1 mg/L in 2 | >5 mg/L in 1 | ND | Favorable PK confirms that capsule content can be safely sprinkled into an enteral feeding tube |
| Risum et al., 2021 [ | HM (16); SOT (2); pulmonary disorder (13); (COPD in 7); other (5) | 36 | 273 | Median 4.3 | 0.5–15.4 | <0.2 mg/L in 7 (no data on compliance) | >10 mg/L in 9/247 (4%) | ND | One case of ISA detectable for 35 days after stopping |
| Kronig et al., 2021 [ | All HM or HSCT | 16 | 35 | Mean 2.9 | 0.9–6.7 | ND | ND | Discontinued in 5 (16%): hypersensitivity in 2, increased liver enzymes in 2, drug interactions in 1 | |
| Cojutti et al., 2021 [ | Onco-hematological malignancy (25); other (25) | 50 | 199 | Median 3.68 | 2.07–5.38 | ND | ND | ND | Drug accumulation observed over time |
Abbreviations: ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; GI, gastrointestinal; HM, hematological malignancies; HSCT, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; ISA, isavuconazole; MIC, minimum inhibitory concentrations; ND, no data; PK, pharmacokinetics; RRT, renal replacement therapy; SOT, solid organ transplant.