Choice and duration of antifungal prophylaxis and treatment in high-risk haematology patients

2021 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
Julien Coussement ◽  
Julian Lindsay ◽  
Benjamin W. Teh ◽  
Monica Slavin
Author(s):  
R Batchelor ◽  
C Thomas ◽  
B J Gardiner ◽  
S J Lee ◽  
S Fleming ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Patients unable to take azoles are a neglected group lacking a standardized approach to antifungal prophylaxis. We evaluated the effectiveness and safety of intermittent liposomal amphotericin (L-AMB) prophylaxis in a heterogenous group of haematology patients. Methods A retrospective cohort of all haematology patients who received a course of intravenous L-AMB defined as 1mg/kg thrice weekly, from 1 July 2013-30 June 2018 were identified from pharmacy records. Outcomes included breakthrough-invasive fungal disease (BIFD), reasons for premature discontinuation and acute kidney injury. Results There were 198 patients who received 273 courses of L-AMB prophylaxis. Using a conservative definition, the BIFD rate was 9.6% (n=19/198) occurring either during L-AMB prophylaxis or up to 7 days from cessation in patients who received a course. Probable/proven-BIFD occurred in 13 patients (6.6%, 13/198), including molds in 54% (n=7) and non-albicans Candidaemia in 46% (n=6). Cumulative incidence of BIFD was highest in patients with acute myeloid leukaemia (6.8%) followed by acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (2.7%) and allogeneic stem cell transplantation (2.5%). The most common indication for L-AMB was chemotherapy or anticancer drug-azole interactions (75% of courses) dominated by vincristine or acute myeloid leukaemia clinical trials, followed by gut absorption concerns (13%) and liver function abnormalities (8.8%). Acute kidney injury using a modified international definition, complicated 27% of courses but was not clinically significant accounting for only 3.3% (9/273) of discontinuations. Conclusions Our findings demonstrate a high rate of BIFD among patients receiving L-AMB prophylaxis. Pragmatic trials will help find the optimal regimen of L-AMB prophylaxis for the many clinical scenarios where azoles are unsuitable, especially as targeted anticancer drugs increase in use.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
James S. Griffiths ◽  
P. Lewis White ◽  
Aiysha Thompson ◽  
Diogo M. da Fonseca ◽  
Robert J. Pickering ◽  
...  

Invasive Aspergillosis (IA), typically caused by the fungus Aspergillus fumigatus, is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in immunocompromised patients. IA remains a significant burden in haematology patients, despite improvements in the diagnosis and treatment of Aspergillus infection. Diagnosing IA is challenging, requiring multiple factors to classify patients into possible, probable and proven IA cohorts. Given the low incidence of IA, using negative results as exclusion criteria is optimal. However, frequent false positives and severe IA mortality rates in haematology patients have led to the empirical use of toxic, drug-interactive and often ineffective anti-fungal therapeutics. Improvements in IA diagnosis are needed to reduce unnecessary anti-fungal therapy. Early IA diagnosis is vital for positive patient outcomes; therefore, a pre-emptive approach is required. In this study, we examined the sequence and expression of four C-type Lectin-like receptors (Dectin-1, Dectin-2, Mincle, Mcl) from 42 haematology patients and investigated each patient’s anti-Aspergillus immune response (IL-6, TNF). Correlation analysis revealed novel IA disease risk factors which we used to develop a pre-emptive patient stratification protocol to identify haematopoietic stem cell transplant patients at high and low risk of developing IA. This stratification protocol has the potential to enhance the identification of high-risk patients whilst reducing unnecessary treatment, minimizing the development of anti-fungal resistance, and prioritising primary disease treatment for low-risk patients.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 2059-2059
Author(s):  
Gene A Wetzstein ◽  
Timothy J. George ◽  
Mahsa Sharifi ◽  
Van D Hoang ◽  
Viet Q Ho ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2059 Poster Board II-36 Background: Patients with prolonged neutropenia are at significant risk for invasive fungal infections (IFI's). The incidence of proven or probable IFI's range from 5-24% in patients treated with AML. Furthermore, the mortality rate in this high-risk population has been reported to be as high as 86% for invasive pulmonary aspergillosis. Given the high mortality rate associated with IFI's and our inability to reliably diagnose active cases, prophylactic therapy has emerged as the preferred approach in this high risk patient population. Recently, Cornely et al. conducted a large, prospective randomized trial evaluating prophylactic posaconazole vs. fluconazole or itraconazole in AML/MDS patients receiving induction chemotherapy. Posaconazole (P) was found to be superior to the standard azoles with respect to the incidence of proven or probable IFI's and demonstrated an overall survival benefit. Given these findings, our institution adopted P as primary antifungal (AF) prophylaxis in this setting. Previously our standard prophylactic approach was voriconazole (V) which has a similar spectrum of activity and is available in an oral and IV formulation in contrast to P which is only available orally. There does not appear to be any comparative published literature to date between these two extended-spectrum azoles in the prophylactic setting. We report herein on the efficacy and safety of voriconazole and posaconazole as primary AF prophylaxis between January 2005 and June 2008. Methods: Patients > 18 yo receiving AML/MDS induction chemotherapy without documentation of IFI were included in this retrospective analysis. The voriconazole group received 400mg PO BID × 1 day, then 200mg PO BID. The posaconazole group received 200 mg PO TID with meals. Therapy was initiated on the first day of chemotherapy or 24 hrs post anthracycline and continued until neutrophil recovery, initiation of empiric AF therapy, occurrence of proven/probable IFI, or adverse event (AE) requiring discontinuation of therapy. Proven/probable IFI was defined in accordance with the EORTC/MSG criteria. Results: 195 patients were evaluable (N=129 V; N=66 P). Baseline characteristics were similar between the two groups with respect to age, sex, diagnosis, cytogenetics, disease status, days of neutropenia, and utilization of growth factors. Median time on prophylaxis was 16 (range: 4-44) and 14 (range: 3-69) days, respectively for P and V. Nine pts (7%; 95% CI (3-13%)) developed proven/probable IFI (6 non-albicans candida, 2 fusarium, 1 zygo) in the V group versus four (6%; 95% CI (2-15%)) IFIs ( 2 trichosporon, 1 fusarium, 1 scedosporium) in the P group. Median time of prophylactic therapy to diagnosis of IFI was 29 days for P vs 25 days for V, respectively. Eight pts (6%) discontinued V therapy because of AE's (4 hallucinations, 1 rash, 2 LFT elevation, 1 torsades) vs five pts (7.5%) for P (3 LFT elevation, 1 vomiting, 1 rash). Conclusion: In the present analysis, we report the comparable efficacy and safety of voriconazole and posaconazole as primary AF prophylaxis in high risk AML/MDS patients receiving induction chemotherapy. There were no differences in the incidence of proven/probable IFI's, time to IFI, time to empiric AF therapy, or AE's requiring discontinuation of therapy. Disclosures: Wetzstein: Pfizer Pharmaceuticals: Honoraria; Schering-Plough Pharmaceuticals: Honoraria. Off Label Use: Voriconazole as primary antifungal prophylaxis therapy in AML patients receiving induction chemotherapy.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 4541-4541
Author(s):  
Giuseppe Irrera ◽  
Messina Giuseppe ◽  
Giuseppe Console ◽  
Massimo Martino ◽  
Cuzzola Maria ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4541 Introduction: Limited data demonstrate to what extent preventing fungal exposures is effective in preventing infection and disease. Further studies are needed to determine the optimal duration of fluconazole prophylaxis in allogeneic recipients to prevent invasive disease with fluconazole-susceptible Candida species during neutropenia. Oral, nonabsorbable antifungal drugs might reduce superficial colonization and control local mucosal candidiasis, but have not been demonstrated to reduce invasive candidiasis. Anti-fungal prophylaxis is recommended in a subpopulation of autologous recipients with underlying hematologic malignancies with prolonged neutropenia and mucosal damage. Methods: This is a retrospective study of 1007 SCT performed in our center between 1992 and 2009 in 809 consecutive patients, irrespective of diagnosis. HEPA filter and environmental monitoring (air, water, surfaces) are attributes of our transplant center. Results: The main characteristics of the patients are reported in Table 1. Systemic prophylaxis was used according to the guidelines (Table 2): fluconazole in the nineties, then itraconazole and from 2004 was either abolished or substituted with non-adsorbable prophylaxis in transplants with standard risk. Secondary prophylaxis was prescribed for high risk patients (with infectious fungal history, suggestive iconography, positive fungal biomarker). In 17 years our Center has never been colonized by mould. Only 3 probable aspergillosis infections and 4 proven fungal infections (fusarium, mucor and 2 aspergillosis) were diagnosed, all in allogeneic patients (2 haplotipical, 1 singenic, 1 sibiling, 1 MUD and 2 mismatched), resulting in death in all cases. No infection was documented in autologous setting, while the infection rate in allogenic setting was 3.6% with an incidence rate of 1.1 infection per 10000 transplants/year. These results are significantly lower than published reports. Conclusion: Systemic antifungal prophylaxis should not be performed in autologous SCT patients. The abuse of systemic prophylaxis targeting yeasts has influenced the change of epidemiology in the transplant setting with prevalence of mould infections. The identification of high risk patients is useful to select patients for systemic antifungal or secondary prophylaxis to reducing overtreatment, incidence of resistant strains and costs. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2002 ◽  
Vol 49 (suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 75-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Grigg

Abstract Patients receiving allogeneic bone marrow transplants are at risk of developing Aspergillus infections. The pre-transplant risk factors for the development of invasive disease include prolonged neutropenia, colonization with Aspergillus sp. or a prior history of fungal infection. Post-transplant risk factors include severe graft-versus-host disease with concomitant high-dose corticosteroid therapy, and colonization with Aspergillus sp. The antifungal prophylaxis of selected high-risk pre-transplant patients at the Royal Melbourne Hospital includes granulocyte transfusions and AmBisome. In high-risk patients post-engraftment, prophylaxis consists of oral itraconazole, or if it cannot be tolerated, AmBisome. Antifungal prophylaxis is discontinued upon resolution of neutropenia, when prednisolone dose falls below 10 mg/day or when Aspergillus colonization disappears. Following this regimen, there has been only one death due to fungal infection in over 80 consecutive allograft patients. This patient was infected with an amphotericin B-resistant organism.


2016 ◽  
pp. AAC.00636-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea G. Varon ◽  
Simone A. Nouér ◽  
Gloria Barreiros ◽  
Beatriz Moritz Trope ◽  
Tiyomi Akiti ◽  
...  

Hematologic patients with superficial skin lesions on admission growingFusariumspp. are at high risk to develop invasive fusariosis during neutropenia. We evaluated the impact of primary prophylaxis with a mold-active azole in preventing the occurrence of invasive fusariosis in these patients. From August 2008 to December 2014, patients with acute leukemia, aplastic anemia, or recipients of hematopoietic cell transplantation were screened on admission with dermatologic examination and direct exam and fungal culture of superficial skin lesions. Until November 2009, no intervention was made. Beginning in December 2009, patients with baseline skin lesions with direct exam and/or culture suggestive of the presence ofFusariumspp. received prophylaxis with voriconazole or posaconazole. Skin lesions in the extremities (mostly onychomycosis and interdigital intertrigo) were present on admission in 88 of 239 episodes (36.8%); 44 had hyaline septate hyphae on direct exam, and 11 grewFusariumspp. Anti-mold prophylaxis was given in 20 episodes (voriconazole in 17 and posaconazole in 3). Invasive fusariosis was diagnosed in 14 episodes (5.8%). Among patients with baseline skin lesions with positive culture forFusariumspp., 4 of 5 without anti-mold prophylaxis developed invasive fusariosis vs. none of 6 with anti-mold prophylaxis (p=0.01, 95% confidence interval for the difference between proportions 22% - 96%). Primary antifungal prophylaxis with an anti-mold azole may prevent the occurrence of invasive fusariosis in high-risk hematologic patients with superficial skin lesions on admission growingFusariumspp.


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