Litcius/Paper detail

Consensus guidelines for optimising antifungal drug delivery and monitoring to avoid toxicity and improve outcomes in patients with haematological malignancy and haemopoietic stem cell transplant recipients, 2021

Maggie Chau, Kathryn Daveson, Jan‐Willem C. Alffenaar, Amanda Gwee, Su Ann Ho, Deborah Marriott, Jason A. Trubiano, Jessie Zhao, Jason A. Roberts

2021Internal Medicine Journal66 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Antifungal agents can have complex dosing and the potential for drug interaction, both of which can lead to subtherapeutic antifungal drug concentrations and poorer clinical outcomes for patients with haematological malignancy and haemopoietic stem cell transplant recipients. Antifungal agents can also be associated with significant toxicities when drug concentrations are too high. Suboptimal dosing can be minimised by clinical assessment, laboratory monitoring, avoidance of interacting drugs, and dose modification. Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) plays an increasingly important role in antifungal therapy, particularly for antifungal agents that have an established exposure-response relationship with either a narrow therapeutic window, large dose-exposure variability, cytochrome P450 gene polymorphism affecting drug metabolism, the presence of antifungal drug interactions or unexpected toxicity, and/or concerns for non-compliance or inadequate absorption of oral antifungals. These guidelines provide recommendations on antifungal drug monitoring and TDM-guided dosing adjustment for selected antifungal agents, and include suggested resources for identifying and analysing antifungal drug interactions. Recommended competencies for optimal interpretation of antifungal TDM and dose recommendations are also provided.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineDosingTherapeutic drug monitoringDrugAntifungal drugAntifungalPharmacologyIntensive care medicineFluconazoleToxicityInternal medicineDermatologyAntifungal resistance and susceptibilityFungal Infections and StudiesNeutropenia and Cancer Infections