Factors Influencing the Safety and Efficiency of Antifungal Prophylaxis with Posaconazole in Children with Hematological Diseases: From Genetics to Polypharmacotherapy

AbstractThe aim of this study was to determine the impact of ABCB1 polymorphism, BMI, age and drug co-administration on safety and efficiency of posaconazole (PCZ) oral suspension treatment in children with hematological diseases. Seventy children were included in the study. ABCB1 polymorphism in fifty-eight children was determined using a PCR –RFLP method. A protocol with data on the health condition, treatment and adverse events (AE), as well as a survey on treatment tolerance for the legal guardians was evaluated. Liver function tests were observed for the first 20 days, and AE during the complete medication period. For statistical analysis a χ2 test with Yates ’s correction, a Pearson’s or Spearman’s correlation test was performed (p <  0.05). Genetic testing showed 24% CC, 46% CT and 30% of TT variants. PCZ prophylaxis failed in twenty cases, where change in prophylactic treatment was needed. Fifty-two children suffered from at least one mild to moderate adverse event. Sixty-five legal guardians completed the survey, most of th em reported the treatment to be well tolerated. ABCB1 polymorphism had no impact on AE occurrence and posaconazole prophylaxis efficiency. Age influenced the number of gastrointestinal (p = 0.02), visual (p = 0.05), neurological (p = 0.01), dermatological (p = 0.002) and flu-like (p = 0.02) complications. AST (p = 0.03) and LDH (p = 0.008) activity presented age dependency. The concomitant use of proton...
Source: Indian Journal of Hematology and Blood Transfusion - Category: Hematology Source Type: research