P-2146. Comparing Valganciclovir Exposures to Predict Neutropenia in Pediatric Solid Organ Transplant Recipients
Mai Uyen Nguyen, Michael N Neely, Anders Åsberg, Kevin J Downes

TL;DR
This study compared drug exposure levels in children who developed neutropenia while taking valganciclovir after organ transplants, finding no significant differences in drug exposure between those who did and did not experience the side effect.
Contribution
The study introduces a matched case-control analysis using simulated drug exposure to investigate the link between valganciclovir and neutropenia in pediatric transplant recipients.
Findings
No significant differences in simulated ganciclovir exposure were found between children with and without neutropenia.
Baseline characteristics of cases and controls were similar at the start of treatment.
Exposure metrics did not differ across solid organ transplant types or timeframes.
Abstract
Valganciclovir (VGCV) is an antiviral commonly used for cytomegalovirus (CMV) prevention in pediatric solid organ transplant (pSOT) recipients. Neutropenia is a common toxicity, but therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) is not routinely available. To evaluate the exposure-toxicity relationship, we compared simulated ganciclovir (GCV) exposures among pSOT recipients with and without neutropenia during VGCV prophylaxis.Figure 1:Flowchart for subject eligibility and matching.Neutropenia is defined as an ANC measurement of < 1,000/µL after at least 2 weeks of valganciclovir prophylaxis but also have any preceding ANC value of at least 1,500/µL.Table 1:Baseline characteristics of matched case and controls at the start of valganciclovir treatment.Creatinine clearance was calculated using the Cockcroft-Gault equation. Body surface area was calculated using the Mosteller formula. Flowchart for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeutropenia and Cancer Infections · Blood disorders and treatments · Cytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research
