Prospective Evaluation of Xerava™ (Eravacycline) Prophylaxis in Hematological Malignancy Patients With Prolonged Neutropenia
Summary
Antibacterial prophylaxis is recommended in patients at high risk of infection, specifically patients undergoing acute leukemia induction therapy or hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) who are expected to have profound neutropenia (ANC\<100 neutrophils/milliliter) for more than seven days. Xerava™ (eravacycline) has a broad spectrum of activity including many multi-drug resistant strains of bacteria. It is not an agent used for treatment of febrile neutropenia, making eravacycline a very attractive alternative to consider in this prophylactic setting. Eravacycline has activity against MRSA, VRE, and Clostridioides difficile, all of which are common problems in this patient population. It also covers the majority of enteric gram-negative pathogens while also producing satisfactory tissue penetration and adequate plasma concentrations, which has classically been a concern with prior agents. Eravacycline has activity against coagulase-negative staphylococcus, which is a common catheter-related infection in leukemia and HSCT patients. The primary objective will be report the incidence of breakthrough infections during eravacycline prophylaxis for hematologic malignancy patients with prolonged neutropenia.
Detailed description
Antibacterial prophylaxis is recommended in patients at high risk of infection, specifically patients undergoing acute leukemia induction therapy or hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) who are expected to have profound neutropenia (ANC\<100 neutrophils/milliliter) for more than seven days. Xerava™ (eravacycline) is a synthetic halogenated tetracycline class antibiotic, with a broad spectrum of activity including many multi-drug resistant strains of bacteria. It is not an agent used for treatment of febrile neutropenia, making eravacycline a very attractive alternative to consider in this prophylactic setting. Adverse effects with this agent are minimal including infusion site reactions and gastrointestinal disorders. Eravacycline has activity against MRSA, VRE, and Clostridioides difficile, all of which are common problems in this patient population. It also covers the majority of enteric gram-negative pathogens while also producing satisfactory tissue penetration and adequate plasma concentrations, which has classically been a concern with prior agents. Eravacycline has activity against coagulase-negative staphylococcus, which is a common catheter-related infection in leukemia and HSCT patients. The primary objective will be report the incidence of breakthrough infections during eravacycline prophylaxis for hematologic malignancy patients with prolonged neutropenia.
Arms & interventions
- DrugEravacycline
Eravacycline will be continued until one of the following criteria is met: * neutrophil recovery (ANC \>500, post-nadir) * febrile neutropenia * breakthrough infection * any grade 3-4 toxicity related to eravacycline use * 21 days of therapy (maximum duration allowed per study protocol)
Outcome measures
Primary
Incidence of Documented Breakthrough Infections
Number of Incidences documented that subjects had a confirmed breakthrough infection.
Time frame: Up to 21 days
Secondary
Adverse Events
Time frame: Daily during Eravacycline
Infection-related mortality
Time frame: Up to 30 days
All-cause mortality
Time frame: Up to 30 days
Acute GVHD
Time frame: Up to 100 days
Neutropenic fever
Time frame: Up to 21 days
Time to neutropenic fever
Time frame: Up to 21 days
Eligibility criteria
Study locations (1)
Aaron Cumpston
Morgantown, West Virginia, 26506