# Clinical and health economic impact of isavuconazole for treatment of invasive aspergillosis and mucormycosis: a retrospective, matched multicentre cohort study in Germany

**Authors:** Marie Engelhard, Sebastian M. Wingen-Heimann, Beate Grüner, Maria J.G.T. Vehreschild, Johanna Kessel, Sabine Ehrlich, Karsten Spiekermann, Enrico Schalk, Ben-Niklas Baermann, J. Janne Vehreschild, Sina M. Pütz

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s15010-025-02674-x · Infection · 2025-10-31

## TL;DR

This study compares isavuconazole to other antifungal drugs for treating invasive fungal infections in Germany, finding similar clinical outcomes but higher treatment costs.

## Contribution

The study provides real-world evidence on clinical and economic outcomes of isavuconazole for invasive fungal infections in haematological malignancy patients.

## Key findings

- Isavuconazole showed similar mortality and hospital stay duration compared to alternative antifungal treatments.
- Isavuconazole treatment was associated with significantly higher drug acquisition and overall treatment costs.
- Hospitalisation costs were comparable between isavuconazole and control treatment groups.

## Abstract

Isavuconazole is effective against invasive aspergillosis (IA) and mucormycosis (IM) and may improve clinical outcomes compared to alternative antifungal treatments. However, real-world evidence regarding its clinical use and the health economic burden of inpatient treatment for IA and IM of patients with haematological malignancies remains limited.

A retrospective, matched, multicentre cohort study was conducted in six German tertiary care centres. The study included adults with haematological or oncological diseases who were diagnosed with proven, probable, or possible IA or IM. We compared clinical and health economic outcomes under first-line treatment initiated with isavuconazole (case group) vs. liposomal amphotericin B (L-AmB) and/or voriconazole (control group) between 2016 and 2021. A micro-costing approach was used to assess direct treatment costs.

We included 198 patients (99 per group), most with a probable or possible classification. Median length of hospital stay was 44 days (interquartile range [IQR] 27–74) in the isavuconazole group and 39 days (IQR 26–56) in the control group (p = 0.285). All-cause mortality rates were 29% and 31% (p = 0.530), with fungal-related deaths occurring in 21% (n = 6) and 23% (n = 7, p = 0.862), respectively. Mean antifungal drug acquisition and overall treatment costs were significantly higher in the isavuconazole group (€22,389 vs. €12,801, p = 0.003; €49,042 vs. €39,369, p = 0.030, respectively), while mean hospitalisation costs were comparable (€28,570 vs. €31,160, p = 0.406).

Our real-world analysis confirmed that first-line treatment initiated with isavuconazole resulted in clinical outcomes equivalent to those of L-AmB and/or voriconazole in patients with IA or IM. However, treatment costs during the in-patient stay were higher with isavuconazole.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s15010-025-02674-x.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** isavuconazole (PubChem CID 6918485), liposomal amphotericin B (PubChem CID 44405442), voriconazole (PubChem CID 71616)
- **Diseases:** invasive aspergillosis (MONDO:0000240), mucormycosis (MONDO:0019136)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** mucormycosis (MESH:D009091), fungal (MESH:D009181), haematological or oncological diseases (MESH:D000072716), haematological malignancies (MESH:D009369), IA (MESH:D055744)
- **Chemicals:** Isavuconazole (MESH:C508735), amphotericin B (MESH:D000666), L-AmB (MESH:C068538), voriconazole (MESH:D065819)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12864223/full.md

## References

7 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12864223/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12864223