Safety and Efficacy of Intermittent Intravenous Administration of High-Dose Micafungin

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Abstract

Background. The use of mold-active azoles for antifungal prophylaxis after allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) is hindered by adverse events and drug-drug interactions. Higher doses of echinocandins administered intermittently may be an alternative in this setting. Methods. This was a single-center, observational 5-year study to characterize the safety and efficacy of intermittent administration of high-dose intravenous micafungin (≥5 doses of ≥300 mg micafungin 2-3 times weekly) in patients with acute leukemia and allogeneic SCT recipients. Results. A total of 104 patients (84 allogeneic SCT recipients and 20 patients with leukemia) received intermittent high-dose intravenous micafungin, 83 (79.8%) as prophylaxis. Large variability in the micafungin dosing regimen was observed; 78 (75%) patients received >75% of their course as 300 mg micafungin 3 times weekly. Liver function tests decreased from baseline to end of treatment (EOT; P

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Neofytos, D., Huang, Y. T., Cheng, K., Cohen, N., Perales, M. A., Barker, J., … Papanicolaou, G. (2015). Safety and Efficacy of Intermittent Intravenous Administration of High-Dose Micafungin. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 61, S652–S661. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/civ818

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