Journal of Clinical Medicine (Dec 2023)

Letermovir Rescue Therapy in Kidney Transplant Recipients with Refractory/Resistant CMV Disease

  • Ellen von Hoerschelmann,
  • Johannes Münch,
  • Linde Gao,
  • Christian Lücht,
  • Marcel G. Naik,
  • Danilo Schmidt,
  • Paul Pitzinger,
  • Detlef Michel,
  • Parthenopi Avaniadi,
  • Eva Schrezenmeier,
  • Mira Choi,
  • Fabian Halleck,
  • Klemens Budde

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13010100
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. 100

Abstract

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(1) Background: CMV infections remain a problem after kidney transplantation, particularly if patients are refractory or resistant (r/r) to treatment with valganciclovir (VGCV) or ganciclovir (GCV). (2) Methods: In a single-center retrospective study, kidney transplant recipients (KTR) receiving letermovir (LTV) as rescue therapy for VGCV-/GCV-r/r CMV disease were analyzed regarding CMV history, immunosuppression, and outcomes. (3) Results: Of 201 KTR treated for CMV between 2017 and 2022, 8 patients received LTV following treatment failure with VGCV/GCV. All patients received CMV prophylaxis with VGCV according to the center’s protocol, and 7/8 patients had a high-risk (D+/R−) CMV constellation. In seven of eight cases, rising CMV levels occurred during prophylaxis. In seven of eight patients, a mutation in UL97 associated with a decreased response to VGCV/GCV was detected. In four of eight patients, LTV resulted in CMV clearance after 24 ± 10 weeks (16–39 weeks), two of eight patients stabilized at viral loads <2000 cop/mL (6–20 weeks), and two of eight patients developed LTV resistance (range 8–10 weeks). (4) Conclusion: LTV, which is currently evaluated for CMV prophylaxis in kidney transplantation, also shows promising results for the treatment of patients with VGCV/GCV resistance despite the risk of developing LTV resistance. Additional studies are needed to further define its role in the treatment of patients with CMV resistance.

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