A 51-year-old man with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and unfavorable-risk cytogenetics attained a first complete remission using conventional induction chemotherapy. He has an HLA-matched related donor (his brother) who agrees to donate hematopoietic cells for an allogeneic transplant. Both the patient and donor are cytomegalovirus (CMV) seropositive.

What is the optimal approach to prevent CMV infection in patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (AHCT) in 2018?

Dating back to the earliest AHCT reports, CMV infection has been identified to be one of the most important complications. CMV infectious pneumonia, specifically, was the most feared obstacle due to its association with very high mortality. Although the unfavorable outcomes in treating established CMV disease certainly have decreased in recent decades, they still remain high, particularly if CMV pneumonia develops.1  CMV-seropositive AHCT recipients have an overall higher rate of mortality than CMV-seronegative patients, especially in transplants from unrelated or mismatched donors; the risk is even greater if the donor is CMV-seronegative.2,3  Furthermore, recipients have a higher nonrelapse mortality if CMV reactivation occurs less than 100 days after transplantation.4  Therefore, strategies to prevent the development of CMV disease should be used. Many different improvements in CMV preventive strategies have been introduced, including new, sensitive, rapid diagnostic tests; recognition of risk factors; and development of antiviral preventive strategies.

Nearly three decades ago, Dr. Joel D. Meyers and colleagues5  recognized that CMV viremia was an important risk factor for the development of CMV disease. As blood test results significantly influenced patient treatment, the concept of preemptive therapy based on a rapid diagnostic test was introduced. The first test fulfilling these requirements was the so-called “shell vial culture.” In a landmark study, Dr. James M. Goodrich and colleagues6  showed that by using this test as a guide to introduce antiviral therapy, it was possible to dramatically reduce the risk for clinically significant CMV disease and thus improve overall survival (OS). Today, most centers use quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on blood samples to monitor patients and guide the use of antiviral therapy. With this strategy, the risk for early CMV disease (developing within the first 100 days after AHCT) is now less than 3 percent, and death directly caused by CMV disease is rare at most centers, though disease occurring later after AHCT is not uncommon.

Despite these advances, several studies have shown that recipients who are CMV-seropositive remain at risk for worse OS and increased transplant-related mortality. Furthermore, developing a primary CMV infection in a pretransplant CMV-seronegative patient is also associated with poorer survival. The latter can be prevented by using “CMV-safe” blood products and, if possible, a CMV-seronegative donor. The importance of donor CMV serological status for a CMV-seropositive patient remains controversial.

Can the negative effect of being a CMV-seropositive transplant recipient be overcome? The logical solution would be to use an effective antiviral prophylaxis similar to the successful strategies for preventing herpes simplex virus and varicella-zoster virus. And is the negative effect then due to CMV replication itself or is there a different mechanism? Support for the theory that viral replication is bad for the patient was presented in an article by Dr. Margaret L. Green and colleagues7  using a retrospective cohort of patients for whom monitoring had been performed using plasma-based PCR. They found that CMV replication indeed was associated with an increased risk for overall and all-cause mortality independent of the use of preemptive therapy. Furthermore, the risks increased with increasing viral load. Thus, it would be logical to prevent CMV replication rather than wait for it to develop and then intervene with preemptive antiviral therapy.

What are the options for preventing CMV replication? Until now, the two most effective antiviral agents have been IV ganciclovir and foscarnet. The use of both drugs, however, has been hampered by the considerable adverse effects. In a prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled study, ganciclovir use reduced the risk for CMV disease but failed to improve OS and was associated with neutropenia and bacterial infections.8  As a result, ganciclovir prophylaxis therapy has been limited. No controlled study has been performed with foscarnet — an agent known to cause marked serum electrolyte abnormalities. Other well-studied prophylactic options include high-dose intravenous acyclovir, oral valaciclovir, and intravenous immune globulin; all agents have been regarded as having low efficacy.9  Furthermore, in a recent retrospective study examining the intensity of anti-CMV prophylaxis in haploidentical transplant recipients, less potent regimens were associated with earlier onset and an increased incidence of CMV reactivation.10  Therefore, interest has been directed toward the study of new antiviral drugs and anti-infective vaccines. Despite initially promising results in phase II studies, two new antiviral agents and one vaccine failed in the pivotal phase III studies. In a randomized, placebo-controlled study, maribavir failed to meet the primary endpoint of reducing CMV disease11 ; this agent is being studied now in much higher dosages for the treatment of resistant or refractory CMV infections. An investigation using intravenous brincidofovir also was unsuccessful; the primary endpoint of lowering clinically significant CMV infection (CMV disease or the need for preemptive therapy) in a randomized, placebo-controlled study was not met, and treatment was associated with significant toxicity.12  Finally, recently released results of a randomized phase III study using the anti-CMV vaccine ASP0113 showed inability to meet the primary and secondary endpoints.13 

On the other hand, letermovir is a highly specific antiviral agent against human CMV that possessed a unique mechanism of action by inhibiting the CMV terminase complex. Dr. Francisco M. Marty and colleagues14  recently reported the results from a randomized, placebo-controlled, phase III clinical trial conducted in CMV-seropositive AHCT recipients in which letermovir was administered through week 14 after HCT. A total of 495 patients had undetectable CMV DNA at randomization. Only 37.5 percent of patients (122 of 325) given letermovir prophylaxis had clinically significant CMV infection or a primary endpoint event by week 24 after AHCT, compared with 60.6 percent of the placebo group (103 of 170; p<0.001). Overall, the frequency and severity of adverse events in the two groups were similar. At 48 weeks after AHCT, all-cause mortality was 20.9 percent among letermovir recipients and 25.5 percent among placebo recipients. The drug was well tolerated also, and did not demonstrate toxic effects on the bone marrow, kidney, or liver. Both the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency recently approved the drug based on these study results.

Will letermovir prophylaxis therapy now become the new standard of care? The study results discussed here certainly are promising, but the optimal fashion to use the drug will require additional studies. For example, it remains unclear if the 14-week duration of prophylaxis used in the study by Dr. Marty and colleagues is the optimal regimen. Although letermovir was superior to placebo in both high-risk and standard-risk patients, the results show an increased risk for developing significant CMV infection after cessation of prophylaxis in the high-risk group. Such data make the case that longer prophylaxis might be beneficial. Other unknowns include the likelihood for subjects to develop CMV resistance to letermovir, though the risk was low in this study.

A more important consideration perhaps, is whether the use of an efficacious antiviral agent will increase the risk of leukemia relapse. Several reports have shown, especially in AML patients, that leukemia relapse risk is lower in the setting of CMV viremia.15-17  Other studies have not been able to demonstrate this association, including the large Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Registry study by Dr. Pierre Teira and colleagues.4  These investigators showed that CMV replication was associated with increased transplant-related mortality and decreased OS without showing a positive effect on relapse in any disease. Although the randomized letermovir investigation did not show an effect on risk of relapse, it should be recognized that the number of patients treated was too low and the follow-up too short to assess this risk. Through further investigation and more careful assessment of these considerations (and with more widespread use of letermovir and other effective anti-CMV agents), we might be able to answer this important question.

In addition to these issues, the economic burden of dealing with CMV infections is significant. Dr. Christine Robin and colleagues18  reported that the financial costs of AHCT increase by 25 to 30 percent in the setting of CMV episodes — a difference that could be reduced by appropriate use of prophylactic strategies. Given what we know today, letermovir seems to be an important development in the long-term struggle to reduce the negative effect of CMV on the outcomes of patients undergoing AHCT. However, letermovir has not been studied in children or in CMV-seronegative subjects.

Given the current approaches, we would use an antiviral prophylaxis strategy using letermovir in adult patients at high risk for CMV infection, while patients at lower risk and children could be treated using the current strategy of monitoring with quantitative PCR and preemptive antiviral therapy.

1.
Erard V, Guthrie KA, Seo S, et al.
Reduced mortality of cytomegalovirus pneumonia after hematopoietic cell transplantation due to antiviral therapy and changes in transplantation practices.
Clin Infect Dis.
2015;61:31-39.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25778751
2.
Boeckh M, Murphy WJ, Peggs KS.
Recent advances in cytomegalovirus: an update on pharmacologic and cellular therapies.
Biol Blood Marrow Transplant.
2015;21:24-29.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25452035
3.
Boeckh M, Nichols WG.
The impact of cytomegalovirus serostatus of donor and recipient before hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in the era of antiviral prophylaxis and preemptive therapy.
Blood.
2004;103:2003-2008.
http://www.bloodjournal.org/content/103/6/2003.long?sso-checked=true
4.
Teira P, Battiwalla M, Ramanathan M, et al.
Early cytomegalovirus reactivation remains associated with increased transplant-related mortality in the current era: a CIBMTR analysis.
Blood.
2016;127:2427-2438.
http://www.bloodjournal.org/content/127/20/2427.long
5.
Meyers JD, Ljungman P, Fisher LD.
Cytomegalovirus excretion as a predictor of cytomegalovirus disease after marrow transplantation: importance of cytomegalovirus viremia.
J Infect Dis.
1990;162:373-380.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2165110
6.
Goodrich JM, Mori M, Gleaves CA, et al.
Early treatment with ganciclovir to prevent cytomegalovirus disease after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation.
N Engl J Med.
1991;325:1601-1607.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1658652
7.
Green ML, Leisenring W, Xie H, et al.
Cytomegalovirus viral load and mortality after haematopoietic stem cell transplantation in the era of pre-emptive therapy: a retrospective cohort study.
Lancet Haematol.
2016;3:e119-e127.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26947200
8.
Goodrich JM, Bowden RA, Fisher L, et al.
Ganciclovir prophylaxis to prevent cytomegalovirus disease after allogeneic marrow transplant.
Ann Intern Med.
1993;118:173-178.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8380242
9.
Boeckh M, Nichols WG, Chemaly RF, et al.
Valganciclovir for the prevention of complications of late cytomegalovirus infection after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation: a randomized trial.
Ann Intern Med.
2015;162:1-10.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25560711
10.
Hammerstrom AE, Lombardi LR, Pingali SR, et al.
Prevention of cytomegalovirus reactivation in haploidentical stem cell transplantation.
Biol Blood Marrow Transplant.
2018;24:353-358.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28986189
11.
Marty FM, Ljungman P, Papanicolaou GA, et al.
Maribavir prophylaxis for prevention of cytomegalovirus disease in recipients of allogeneic stem-cell transplants: a phase 3, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomised trial.
Lancet Infect Dis.
2011;11:284-292.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21414843
12.
Marty FM, Winston DJ, Chemaly RF, et al.
Brincidofovir for prevention of cytomegalovirus (CMV) after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) in CMV-seropositive patients: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group phase 3 trial.
Biol Blood Marr Transp.
2016;22:SuppS23.
http://www.bbmt.org/article/S1083-8791(16)00030-6/fulltext
13.
Astellas Pharma Inc., Vical Incorporated.
Astellas and Vical announce top-line results for phase 3 trial of cytomegalovirus vaccine ASP0113 in hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients.
Astellas.
Jan 22, 2018.
https://newsroom.astellas.us/2018-01-22-Astellas-and-Vical-Announce-Top-Line-Results-for-Phase-3-Trial-of-Cytomegalovirus-Vaccine-ASP0113-in-Hematopoietic-Stem-Cell-Transplant-Recipients
14.
Marty FM, Ljungman P, Chemaly RF, et al.
Letermovir prophylaxis for cytomegalovirus in hematopoietic-cell transplantation.
N Engl J Med.
2017;377:2433-2444.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29211658
15.
Lönnqvist B, Ringdèn O, Ljungman P, et al.
Reduced risk of recurrent leukaemia in bone marrow transplant recipients after cytomegalovirus infection.
Br J Haematol.
1986;63:671-679.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3015193
16.
Elmaagacli AH, Steckel NK, Koldehoff M, et al.
Early human cytomegalovirus replication after transplantation is associated with a decreased relapse risk: evidence for a putative virus-versus-leukemia effect in acute myeloid leukemia patients.
Blood.
2011;118:1402-1412.
http://www.bloodjournal.org/content/118/5/1402.long?sso-checked=true
17.
Green ML, Leisenring WM, Xie H, et al.
CMV reactivation after allogeneic HCT and relapse risk: evidence for early protection in acute myeloid leukemia.
Blood.
2013;122:1316-1324.
http://www.bloodjournal.org/content/122/7/1316.long
18.
Robin C, Hémery F, Dindorf C, et al.
Economic burden of preemptive treatment of CMV infection after allogeneic stem cell transplantation: a retrospective study of 208 consecutive patients.
BMC Infect Dis.
2017;17:747.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29207952

Competing Interests

Dr. Ljungman receives research support from Merck and Co., Inc., and Astellas Pharma, Inc., and is an advisory board member for AiCuris GmbH & Co. KG. Dr. Lazarus indicated no relevant conflicts of interest.