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CHMP recommends letermovir as CMV prophylaxis

Photo by Chad McNeeley
HSCT preparation

The European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) has recommended marketing authorization for letermovir (Prevymis), which belongs to a class of non-nucleoside CMV inhibitors known as 3,4 dihydro-quinazolines.

The CHMP is advocating that letermovir be approved as prophylaxis for cytomegalovirus (CMV) reactivation and disease in patients who receive immunosuppressants after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT).

The CHMP’s opinion will be reviewed by the European Commission (EC).

If the EC agrees with the CHMP, the commission will grant a centralized marketing authorization that will be valid in the European Union. Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein will make corresponding decisions on the basis of the EC’s decision.

The EC typically makes a decision within 67 days of the CHMP’s recommendation.

Letermovir previously received an orphan designation from the European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products in June 2012. Now, the committee will assess whether the orphan designation should be maintained.

Phase 3 trial

The CHMP’s recommendation to authorize use of letermovir is based on data from a phase 3 trial. Results from this trial were presented at the 2017 BMT Tandem Meetings.

The trial enrolled adult recipients of allogeneic HSCTs who were CMV-seropositive. Patients were randomized (2:1) to receive either letermovir (at a dose of 480 mg once-daily, adjusted to 240 mg when co-administered with cyclosporine) or placebo.

Study drug was initiated after HSCT (at any time from day 0 to 28 post-transplant) and continued through week 14 post-transplant. Patients were monitored through week 24 post-HSCT for the primary efficacy endpoint, with continued follow-up through week 48.

Among the 565 treated patients, 34% were engrafted at baseline, and 30% had one or more factors associated with additional risk for CMV reactivation. The most common primary reasons for transplant were acute myeloid leukemia (38%), myelodysplastic syndromes (16%), and lymphoma (12%).

Thirty eight percent of patients in the letermovir arm and 61% in the placebo arm failed prophylaxis.

Reasons for failure (in the letermovir and placebo arms, respectively) included:

  • Clinically significant CMV infection—18% vs 42%
  • Initiation of PET based on documented CMV viremia—16% vs 40%
  • CMV end-organ disease—2% for both
  • Study discontinuation before week 24—17% vs 16%
  • Missing outcome in week 24 visit window—3% for both.

The stratum-adjusted treatment difference for letermovir vs placebo was -23.5 (95% CI, -32.5, -14.6, P<0.0001).

The Kaplan-Meier event rate for all-cause mortality in the letermovir and placebo arms, respectively, was 12% and 17% at week 24 and 24% and 28% at week 48.

Common adverse events (in the letermovir and placebo arms, respectively) were nausea (27% vs 23%), diarrhea (26% vs 24%), vomiting (19% vs 14%), peripheral edema (14% vs 9%), cough (14% vs 10%), headache (14% vs 9%), fatigue (13% vs 11%), and abdominal pain (12% vs 9%).

The cardiac adverse event rate (regardless of investigator-assessed causality) was 13% in the letermovir arm and 6% in the placebo arm. The most common cardiac adverse events (in the letermovir and placebo arms, respectively) were tachycardia (4% vs 2%) and atrial fibrillation (3% vs 1%).

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Photo by Chad McNeeley
HSCT preparation

The European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) has recommended marketing authorization for letermovir (Prevymis), which belongs to a class of non-nucleoside CMV inhibitors known as 3,4 dihydro-quinazolines.

The CHMP is advocating that letermovir be approved as prophylaxis for cytomegalovirus (CMV) reactivation and disease in patients who receive immunosuppressants after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT).

The CHMP’s opinion will be reviewed by the European Commission (EC).

If the EC agrees with the CHMP, the commission will grant a centralized marketing authorization that will be valid in the European Union. Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein will make corresponding decisions on the basis of the EC’s decision.

The EC typically makes a decision within 67 days of the CHMP’s recommendation.

Letermovir previously received an orphan designation from the European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products in June 2012. Now, the committee will assess whether the orphan designation should be maintained.

Phase 3 trial

The CHMP’s recommendation to authorize use of letermovir is based on data from a phase 3 trial. Results from this trial were presented at the 2017 BMT Tandem Meetings.

The trial enrolled adult recipients of allogeneic HSCTs who were CMV-seropositive. Patients were randomized (2:1) to receive either letermovir (at a dose of 480 mg once-daily, adjusted to 240 mg when co-administered with cyclosporine) or placebo.

Study drug was initiated after HSCT (at any time from day 0 to 28 post-transplant) and continued through week 14 post-transplant. Patients were monitored through week 24 post-HSCT for the primary efficacy endpoint, with continued follow-up through week 48.

Among the 565 treated patients, 34% were engrafted at baseline, and 30% had one or more factors associated with additional risk for CMV reactivation. The most common primary reasons for transplant were acute myeloid leukemia (38%), myelodysplastic syndromes (16%), and lymphoma (12%).

Thirty eight percent of patients in the letermovir arm and 61% in the placebo arm failed prophylaxis.

Reasons for failure (in the letermovir and placebo arms, respectively) included:

  • Clinically significant CMV infection—18% vs 42%
  • Initiation of PET based on documented CMV viremia—16% vs 40%
  • CMV end-organ disease—2% for both
  • Study discontinuation before week 24—17% vs 16%
  • Missing outcome in week 24 visit window—3% for both.

The stratum-adjusted treatment difference for letermovir vs placebo was -23.5 (95% CI, -32.5, -14.6, P<0.0001).

The Kaplan-Meier event rate for all-cause mortality in the letermovir and placebo arms, respectively, was 12% and 17% at week 24 and 24% and 28% at week 48.

Common adverse events (in the letermovir and placebo arms, respectively) were nausea (27% vs 23%), diarrhea (26% vs 24%), vomiting (19% vs 14%), peripheral edema (14% vs 9%), cough (14% vs 10%), headache (14% vs 9%), fatigue (13% vs 11%), and abdominal pain (12% vs 9%).

The cardiac adverse event rate (regardless of investigator-assessed causality) was 13% in the letermovir arm and 6% in the placebo arm. The most common cardiac adverse events (in the letermovir and placebo arms, respectively) were tachycardia (4% vs 2%) and atrial fibrillation (3% vs 1%).

Photo by Chad McNeeley
HSCT preparation

The European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) has recommended marketing authorization for letermovir (Prevymis), which belongs to a class of non-nucleoside CMV inhibitors known as 3,4 dihydro-quinazolines.

The CHMP is advocating that letermovir be approved as prophylaxis for cytomegalovirus (CMV) reactivation and disease in patients who receive immunosuppressants after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT).

The CHMP’s opinion will be reviewed by the European Commission (EC).

If the EC agrees with the CHMP, the commission will grant a centralized marketing authorization that will be valid in the European Union. Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein will make corresponding decisions on the basis of the EC’s decision.

The EC typically makes a decision within 67 days of the CHMP’s recommendation.

Letermovir previously received an orphan designation from the European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products in June 2012. Now, the committee will assess whether the orphan designation should be maintained.

Phase 3 trial

The CHMP’s recommendation to authorize use of letermovir is based on data from a phase 3 trial. Results from this trial were presented at the 2017 BMT Tandem Meetings.

The trial enrolled adult recipients of allogeneic HSCTs who were CMV-seropositive. Patients were randomized (2:1) to receive either letermovir (at a dose of 480 mg once-daily, adjusted to 240 mg when co-administered with cyclosporine) or placebo.

Study drug was initiated after HSCT (at any time from day 0 to 28 post-transplant) and continued through week 14 post-transplant. Patients were monitored through week 24 post-HSCT for the primary efficacy endpoint, with continued follow-up through week 48.

Among the 565 treated patients, 34% were engrafted at baseline, and 30% had one or more factors associated with additional risk for CMV reactivation. The most common primary reasons for transplant were acute myeloid leukemia (38%), myelodysplastic syndromes (16%), and lymphoma (12%).

Thirty eight percent of patients in the letermovir arm and 61% in the placebo arm failed prophylaxis.

Reasons for failure (in the letermovir and placebo arms, respectively) included:

  • Clinically significant CMV infection—18% vs 42%
  • Initiation of PET based on documented CMV viremia—16% vs 40%
  • CMV end-organ disease—2% for both
  • Study discontinuation before week 24—17% vs 16%
  • Missing outcome in week 24 visit window—3% for both.

The stratum-adjusted treatment difference for letermovir vs placebo was -23.5 (95% CI, -32.5, -14.6, P<0.0001).

The Kaplan-Meier event rate for all-cause mortality in the letermovir and placebo arms, respectively, was 12% and 17% at week 24 and 24% and 28% at week 48.

Common adverse events (in the letermovir and placebo arms, respectively) were nausea (27% vs 23%), diarrhea (26% vs 24%), vomiting (19% vs 14%), peripheral edema (14% vs 9%), cough (14% vs 10%), headache (14% vs 9%), fatigue (13% vs 11%), and abdominal pain (12% vs 9%).

The cardiac adverse event rate (regardless of investigator-assessed causality) was 13% in the letermovir arm and 6% in the placebo arm. The most common cardiac adverse events (in the letermovir and placebo arms, respectively) were tachycardia (4% vs 2%) and atrial fibrillation (3% vs 1%).

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