The Deferasirox-AmBisome Therapy for Mucormycosis (DEFEAT Mucor) study: a
randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial.
Author(s): Spellberg B, Ibrahim AS, Chin-Hong PV, Kontoyiannis DP, Morris MI, Perfect JR,
Fredricks D, Brass EP.
Affiliation(s): Division of General Internal Medicine, Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute,
Harbor-University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) Medical Center, Torrance, CA,
USA. bspellberg@labiomed.org
Publication date & source: 2012, J Antimicrob Chemother. , 67(3):715-22
OBJECTIVES: Host iron availability is fundamental to mucormycosis pathogenesis.
The combination of liposomal amphotericin B (LAmB) and deferasirox iron chelation
therapy synergistically improved survival in diabetic mice with mucormycosis. To
determine the safety of combination deferasirox plus LAmB therapy for
mucormycosis, a multicentred, placebo-controlled, double-blinded clinical trial
was conducted.
METHODS: Twenty patients with proven or probable mucormycosis were randomized to
receive treatment with LAmB plus deferasirox (20 mg/kg/day for 14 days) or LAmB
plus placebo (NCT00419770, clinicaltrials.gov). The primary analyses were for
safety and exploratory efficacy.
RESULTS: Patients in the deferasirox arm (n=11) were more likely than those in
the placebo arm (n=9) to have active malignancy, neutropenia and corticosteroid
therapy, and were less likely to receive concurrent non-study antifungal therapy.
Reported adverse events and serious adverse events were similar between the
groups. However, death was more frequent in the deferasirox than in the placebo
arm at 30 days (45% versus 11%, P=0.1) and 90 days (82% versus 22%, P=0.01).
Global success (alive, clinically stable, radiographically improved) for the
deferasirox arm versus the placebo arm at 30 and 90 days, respectively, was 18%
(2/11) versus 67% (6/9) (P=0.06) and 18% (2/11) versus 56% (5/9) (P=0.2).
CONCLUSIONS: Patients with mucormycosis treated with deferasirox had a higher
mortality rate at 90 days. Population imbalances in this small Phase II study
make generalizable conclusions difficult. Nevertheless, these data do not support
a role for initial, adjunctive deferasirox therapy for mucormycosis.
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