Serum posaconazole levels during acute myeloid leukaemia induction therapy: Correlations with breakthrough invasive fungal infections

30Citations
Citations of this article
29Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

The usefulness of posaconazole therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) is still a matter of debate. A correlation between posaconazole serum levels and breakthrough invasive fungal infections (IFI) has not been clearly demonstrated so far. We analysed posaconazole serum levels in patients with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) during induction therapy and correlated them with the incidence of breakthrough IFI and the need of systemic antifungal therapy. Overall, 77 AML patients receiving posaconazole were evaluated for serum levels; breakthrough IFI were observed in five with at least one posaconazole TDM (6.5%). Median serum level was 534 ng ml-1 (IQ range: 298.5-750.5 ng ml-1) and did not change significantly over time. Four of the 40 patients with median posaconazole levels <500 ng ml-1 developed IFI, as compared with only 1 of the 37 patients with median levels ≥500 (10% vs. 2.7%, P = 0.19). Median posaconazole levels on day 7 were 384.5 ng ml-1 (IQ range: 207-659 ng ml-1) and 560.5 ng ml-1 (IQ range: 395-756 ng ml-1) in patients requiring or not systemic antifungal treatment respectively (P = 0.067). These results seem to confirm that higher median serum levels of posaconazole correlate with higher prophylactic efficacy against proven/probable IFI and with lesser need of systemic antifungal therapy.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Cattaneo, C., Panzali, A., Passi, A., Borlenghi, E., Lamorgese, C., Petullà, M., … Rossi, G. (2015). Serum posaconazole levels during acute myeloid leukaemia induction therapy: Correlations with breakthrough invasive fungal infections. Mycoses, 58(6), 362–367. https://doi.org/10.1111/myc.12326

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free