CMV load a potential endpoint in transplant infection trials
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Although symptomatic cytomegalovirus disease is typically the endpoint in clinical trials involving organ recipients, viral load can act as a surrogate endpoint, according to researchers.
Several associations between viremia and actual disease in cytomegalovirus (CMV) suggest that there are advantages to using viral load as an endpoint, they wrote in Clinical Infectious Diseases.
“While these data in isolation do not provide definitive proof for the utility of viral load as a surrogate endpoint, when taken together, they provide compelling rationale that this may be a reasonable primary outcome in clinical trials,” researcher Yoichiro Natori, MD, of the multiorgan transplant program at the University Health Network in Toronto, and colleagues wrote. “Given the low incidence of CMV disease in most modern clinical settings, coupled with difficulties in the definitive clinical diagnosis of CMV disease after solid organ transplant — especially viral syndrome — CMV viral load may in fact be a preferable and more robust endpoint.”
The researchers assessed data from dozens of previous studies that included CMV viremia–disease links. In one meta-analysis, they found that the mean viral load was significantly higher in CMV disease than in asymptomatic viremia (OR = 9.3).
Other studies indicated that a faster increase in viral load correlated with CMV disease, Yoichiro and colleagues said. Those studies included one in which there was a five- to 10-fold increase in CMV DNA titers just before the disease developed.
The researchers also found that viremia and disease rates were much lower when patients were on prophylaxis than during patient follow-up, after prophylaxis ended. In two meta-analyses involving more than 20 studies, the overall rate of viremia incidence was 3.2% during prophylaxis and 34.3% at follow-up. The CMV disease rate was 1.1% during prophylaxis and 13% at follow-up.
Therapy for asymptomatic CMV viremia can avert disease onset, the researchers further asserted. Among 17 studies, the pooled incidence of viremia in patients receiving preemptive viremia therapy was 48.9%. The pooled incidence of actual disease in patients receiving preemptive therapy was 6.9%.
Finally, two studies showed that a decline in CMV viral load correlated with the end of symptoms, the researchers said. In one study, CMV disease resolved in 251 out of 267 patients by day 49 of treatment.
Patients who had a pretreatment CMV DNA of less than 18,200 IU/mL experienced disease resolution faster (adjusted HR = 1.56). Patients with viral load suppression at days 7, 14 and 21 of treatment also had faster disease resolution (aHR = 1.61, 1.73 and 1.64, respectively).
Despite the potential value of CMV viremia as a marker, Natori and colleagues concluded, its utility could depend on the type of infection and organs that are affected.
“Future clinical trials of candidate CMV drugs or vaccines should therefore attempt to differentiate between primary infection, reinfection and reactivation and consider that the validity of CMV viremia as a surrogate marker may differ in these different types of infection,” they wrote. – by Joe Green
Reference:
Razonable RR, et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2013;doi:10.1093/cid/cit096.
Disclosures: Natori reports no relevant financial disclosures. Please see the study for all other authors’ relevant financial disclosures.