European Study of Cerebral Aspergillosis treated with Isavuconazole: an EFISG study.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_835D7D75C12A
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
European Study of Cerebral Aspergillosis treated with Isavuconazole: an EFISG study.
Journal
Clinical infectious diseases
Author(s)
Serris A., Rautemaa-Richardson R., Laranjinha J., Candoni A., Garcia-Vidal C., Alastruey-Izquierdo A., Hammarström H., Seidel D., Styczynski J., Sabino R., Lamoth F., Prattes J., Warris A., Porcher R., Lanternier F.
Working group(s)
ESCAI study group and EFISG
Contributor(s)
Danion F., Bonhomme J., Couchepin J., Cunha M.R., Maury I., Pereira Á.A., Ceia F., Lino R., Veríssimo C.
ISSN
1537-6591 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1058-4838
Publication state
In Press
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: aheadofprint
Abstract
Cerebral aspergillosis (CA) is associated with high mortality. According to ECIL-6 and ESCMID guidelines, the recommended first-line treatment for all forms of aspergillosis is voriconazole or isavuconazole. However, little is known about the efficacy and safety of isavuconazole in CA.
We conducted a European multi-centre retrospective study of patients treated with isavuconazole for proven or probable CA between 2014 and 2022 and compared the outcomes to those of weighted control groups from the previously published French national cohort of CA, the Cerebral Aspergillosis Lesional Study.
Forty patients from 10 countries were included. The main underlying conditions were hematological malignancies (53%) and solid organ transplantation (20%). Isavuconazole was administered as a first-line treatment to 10 patients, primarily in combination therapy, resulting in control of CA in 70% of these cases. Thirty patients received isavuconazole after a median of 65 days on another therapy, mostly because of side effects (50%) or therapeutic failure (23%) of the previous treatment. Predominantly given as monotherapy, it achieved control of CA in 73% of the patients. Seventeen patients (43%) undergone neurosurgery. When measured, isavuconazole levels were low in cerebrospinal fluid but adequate in serum and brain tissue. Isavuconazole toxicity led to treatment interruption in 7.5% of the patients. Twelve-week mortality was 18%. Comparison with the CEREALS cohort showed a comparable survival in patients receiving isavuconazole or voriconazole as a first line treatment.
Isavuconazole appears to be a well-tolerated treatment. Mortality of CA treated with isavuconazole is similar to that reported with voriconazole.
Keywords
cerebral aspergillosis, invasive aspergillosis, isavuconazole
Pubmed
Create date
05/08/2024 16:37
Last modification date
06/08/2024 7:03
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