doi:10.1007/s10157-024-02471-0...
Springer
Urology
2024
4/17/2024
Background Letermovir is approved for cytomegalovirus (CMV) prophylaxis in adult allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation recipients worldwide and is also approved in the United States for CMV prophylaxis in adult high-risk (D+/R−) kidney transplant recipients (KTRs).
The safety and efficacy of letermovir for CMV prophylaxis in adult Japanese KTRs are reported here.
Methods In this Phase 3, single-arm, open-label study, adult Japanese KTRs with CMV serostatuses D+/R−, D+/R+, and D−/R+ received letermovir 480 mg daily orally within 7 days post-transplant through Week 28.
Participants were followed through Week 52.
The primary objective was to evaluate letermovir safety and tolerability.
Efficacy was a secondary objective, measured by CMV disease, CMV disease or infection requiring intervention, and quantifiable CMV DNAemia.
All CMV disease cases were confirmed by an independent adjudication committee.
Results Among 22 participants (12 were D+/R−) who received letermovir prophylaxis, 20 (90.9%) experienced ≥ 1 AE through Week 28.
Most AEs were mild to moderate in severity; no deaths were reported.
During the prophylaxis period through Week 28, one transient case of quantifiable CMV DNAemia was detected, but no CMV disease or infection requiring intervention was reported.
Through Week 52, four D+/R− participants met the endpoint of CMV disease or infection requiring intervention, of whom two had committee-confirmed CMV syndrome; all recovered with CMV therapy.
A total of 5 participants had quantifiable CMV DNAemia through Week 52.
Conclusion Letermovir was generally well tolerated, and the data support its use for the prevention of CMV disease/infection in adult Japanese KTRs.
Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04129398.
Ishida, Hideki,Goto, Norihiko,Imamura, Ryoichi,Sasaki, Hajime,Unagami, Kohei,Futamura, Kenta,Murata, Yoshihiko,Oshima, Nobuyuki,Eto, Toshiko,Haber, Barbara, 2024, Letermovir safety and efficacy for cytomegalovirus prophylaxis in adult Japanese kidney transplant recipients: a multicenter, open-label, noncomparative Phase 3 study, Springer