The purpose of this study was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of letermovir (LET) versus placebo when cytomegalovirus (CMV) prophylaxis was extended from 100 days to 200 days post-transplant in CMV seropositive participants who received an allogenic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT). It was hypothesized that LET is superior to placebo in the prevention of clinically-significant CMV infection when LET prophylaxis is extended from 100 to 200 days.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
220
LET tablet or intravenous infusion at a total daily dose of 240 mg (when given with cyclosporin A) or 480 mg (when given alone).
Placebo was administered as tablets matched to LET or as inactive (saline or dextrose) intravenous infusion.
City of Hope National Medical Center ( Site 0158)
Duarte, California, United States
University of California Davis Medical Center ( Site 0156)
Sacramento, California, United States
University of Miami, Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center ( Site 0160)
Miami, Florida, United States
Indiana Blood and Marrow Transplantation ( Site 0175)
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Brigham & Women's Hospital ( Site 0161)
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Percentage of Participants With Clinically Significant CMV Infection From Week 14 (~100 Days) Post-transplant Through Week 28 (~200 Days) Post-transplant
Clinically significant CMV infection is either the onset of probable or proven CMV end-organ disease or initiation of anti-CMV preemptive therapy (PET) with approved anti-CMV agents (ganciclovir, valganciclovir, foscarnet, and/or cidofovir) based on documented CMV viremia and the clinical condition of the participant. Missing values were handled by the observed failure (OF) approach where failure was defined as all participants who develop clinically significant CMV infection or discontinue prematurely from the study with CMV viremia from week 14 (\~100 days) through week 28 post-transplant. It was hypothesized that LET is superior to placebo in the prevention of clinically significant CMV infection when LET prophylaxis is extended from 100 to 200 days.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 28 post-transplant (approximately 14 weeks)
Percentage of Participants Experiencing ≥1 Adverse Events (AEs) From Week 14 (~100 Days) Post-transplant Through Week 28 (~200 Days) Post-transplant
An adverse event (AE) is any untoward medical occurrence in a clinical study participant, temporally associated with the use of study intervention, whether or not considered related to the study intervention.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 28 post-transplant (approximately 14 weeks)
Percentage of Participants Withdrawing From Study Drug Due to an AE From Week 14 (~100 Days) Post-transplant Through Week 28 (~200 Days) Post-transplant
An AE is any untoward medical occurrence in a clinical study participant, temporally associated with the use of study intervention, whether or not considered related to the study intervention.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 28 post-transplant (approximately 14 weeks)
Percentage of Participants With Clinically Significant CMV Infection From Week 14 Post-transplant Through Week 38 Post-transplant
Clinically significant CMV infection is either the onset of probable or proven CMV end-organ disease or initiation of anti-CMV PET with approved anti-CMV agents (ganciclovir, valganciclovir, foscarnet, and/or cidofovir) based on documented CMV viremia and the clinical condition of the participant. Missing values were handled by the OF approach where failure was defined as all participants who develop clinically significant CMV infection or discontinue prematurely from the study with CMV viremia from week 14 (\~100 days) through week 38 post-transplant.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 38 post-transplant (approximately 24 weeks)
Percentage of Participants With Clinically Significant CMV Infection From Week 14 Post-transplant Through Week 48 Post-transplant
Clinically significant CMV infection is either the onset of probable or proven CMV end-organ disease or initiation of anti-CMV PET with approved anti-CMV agents (ganciclovir, valganciclovir, foscarnet, and/or cidofovir) based on documented CMV viremia and the clinical condition of the participant. Missing values were handled by the OF approach where failure was defined as all participants who develop clinically significant CMV infection or discontinue prematurely from the study with CMV viremia from week 14 (\~100 days) through week 48 post-transplant.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 48 post-transplant (approximately 34 weeks)
Time to Onset of Clinically Significant CMV Infection From Week 14 Post-transplant to Week 28 Post-transplant
Clinically significant CMV infection is either the onset of probable or proven CMV end-organ disease or initiation of anti-CMV PET with approved anti-CMV agents (ganciclovir, valganciclovir, foscarnet, and/or cidofovir) based on documented CMV viremia and the clinical condition of the participant. Time to onset of clinically significant CMV infection is the elapsed time from transplant to the onset of CMV end-organ disease or to the initiation of anti-CMV PET. Time to onset was determined from the Kaplan-Meier method for censored data.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 28 post-transplant (approximately 14 weeks)
Time to Onset of Clinically Significant CMV Infection From Week 14 Post-transplant to Week 48 Post-transplant
Clinically significant CMV infection is either the onset of probable or proven CMV end-organ disease or initiation of anti-CMV PET with approved anti-CMV agents (ganciclovir, valganciclovir, foscarnet, and/or cidofovir) based on documented CMV viremia and the clinical condition of the participant. Time to onset of clinically significant CMV infection is the elapsed time from transplant to the onset of CMV end-organ disease or to the initiation of anti-CMV PET. Time to onset was determined from the Kaplan-Meier method for censored data.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 48 post-transplant (approximately 34 weeks)
Percentage of Participants With CMV Viremia Who Started PET From Week 14 Post-transplant to Week 28 Post-transplant
The percentage of participants with CMV viremia who initiated PET of anti-CMV agents (ganciclovir, valganciclovir, foscarnet, and/or cidofovir) was determined. Missing values were handled with the OF approach, where failure was defined as all participants who develop clinically significant CMV infection or discontinue prematurely from the study with CMV viremia from week 14 through week 28 post-transplant.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 28 post-transplant (approximately 14 weeks)
Percentage of Participants With CMV Viremia Who Started PET From Week 14 Post-transplant to Week 48 Post-transplant
The percentage of participants with CMV viremia who initiated PET of anti-CMV agents (ganciclovir, valganciclovir, foscarnet, and/or cidofovir) was determined. Missing values were handled with the OF approach, where failure was defined as all participants who develop clinically significant CMV infection or discontinue prematurely from the study with CMV viremia from week 14 through week 48 post-transplant.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 48 post-transplant (approximately 34 weeks)
Percentage of Participants With All-cause Mortality From Week 14 Post-transplant to Week 28 Post-transplant
The percentage of participants who died due to any cause (all-cause mortality) from Week 14 to Week 28 was determined.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 28 post-transplant (approximately 14 weeks)
Percentage of Participants With All-cause Mortality From Week 14 Post-transplant to Week 48 Post-transplant
The percentage of participants who died due to any cause (all-cause mortality) from Week 14 to Week 48 was determined.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 48 post-transplant (approximately 34 weeks)
Time to All-cause Mortality From Week 14 Post-transplant to Week 28 Post-transplant
Time to all-cause mortality is the time elapsed after Week 14 post-transplant and death due to any cause, and was determined from the Kaplan-Meier method for censored data.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 28 post-transplant (approximately 14 weeks)
Time to All-cause Mortality From Week 14 Post-transplant to Week 48 Post-transplant
Time to all-cause mortality is the time elapsed after Week 14 post-transplant and death due to any cause, and was determined from the Kaplan-Meier method for censored data.
Time frame: From Week 14 post-transplant to Week 48 post-transplant (approximately 34 weeks)
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John Theurer Cancer Center at Hackensack University Med Ctr ( Site 0174)
Hackensack, New Jersey, United States
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center ( Site 0164)
New York, New York, United States
Duke University Medical Center ( Site 0169)
Durham, North Carolina, United States
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center ( Site 0154)
Houston, Texas, United States
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center ( Site 0152)
Seattle, Washington, United States
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