Pharmacology Clinical Trial
Official title:
Voriconazole Plasma Concentration and Toxicity
This study will look at how voriconazole, a drug used to treat or protect against fungal
infections, affects the body. Adverse effects associated with voriconazole include skin
problems and temporary changes in vision, mental status and liver function. There is some
evidence that these side effects may be more intense when there are high levels of the drug
in the blood. The amount of voriconazole in the body is determined by how much of the drug
the patient receives and by the patient's ability to inactivate and excrete it, which may be
determined in part by genes. This study will examine: 1) side effects patients develop from
voriconazole; 2) whether the side effects experienced are related to the concentration of
drug in the body; and 3) the role of genes in determining how quickly the body inactivates
and excretes the drug.
Patients 12 and older who are participating in studies in the National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), the National Cancer Institute (NCI) or the National Heart,
Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) and have been treated with voriconazole for 15 days or less
may be eligible for this study.
Participation involves the following:
- Identification and recording of adverse effects patients experience due to voriconazole
treatment
- Collection of basic information about the patient's medical history and treatment
- Blood draws once a week during the patient's hospitalization
- Collection of routine laboratory test results ordered by the patient's doctor
- Blood draw to identify genes responsible for voriconazole inactivation
- Weekly monitoring for the possibility of voriconazole adverse effects
- Blood draw to measure blood levels of voriconazole when the drug is stopped, if it is
stopped because of an adverse effect
- Evaluations at outpatient visits, including a blood draw to measure voriconazole blood
levels
Participation in the study ends 7 days after voriconazole treatment is stopped because it is
no longer needed.
Voriconazole (Vfend(Registered Trademark), Pfizer) has achieved common usage at the NIH
(National Institutes of Health) Clinical Research Center for the treatment of fungal
infections in immunosuppressed patients. Toxicity includes relatively frequent but reversible
changes in vision and more infrequent, potentially serious hepatotoxicity, decreased
cognitive function and rash. Incidence of these more serious adverse events has been
difficult to ascertain because of the morbidity of underlying disease in patients receiving
voriconazole, but a minimum estimate is 10 percent. It is known that voriconazole plasma
concentrations vary between patients over a fifty-fold range but it is not known whether
toxicity is related to plasma drug exposure. The reason for the differing voriconazole plasma
concentrations between normal individuals is partly due to genetic variations in hepatic
cytochrome enzymes CYP2C9 and CYP2C19 (Cytochrome P450, family 2, subfamily C, polypeptide 9
and 19, respectively). In patients with underlying illness, drug interactions and decreased
hepatic drug clearance may contribute to variability.
The purpose of the study is to record prospectively the adverse effects of voriconazole in
Clinical Center patients who have been prescribed the drug by their primary physician. We
will ask the primary physician to order a trough voriconazole plasma levels once a week. The
test will not be reported to the physician. Because interpretation of the test is unknown,
the physicians will be blinded to the report. Rather, the primary objective of the study is
to analyze the voriconazole plasma concentrations when the study is completed to determine if
there is a concentration and duration of drug exposure that correlates with toxicity. A
secondary objective is to determine the 2C9 and 2C19 genotype of patients and search for
possible correlations between genotype and plasma voriconazole concentrations. Administration
of other drugs given to the patient will be tracked to analyze whether any previously unknown
drug interactions seem to have changed the voriconazole plasma concentration. The study will
also determine the incidence of adverse effects of voriconazole in our patient population.
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