A randomized, placebo‐controlled, dose‐escalation phase I/II multicenter trial of low‐dose cidofovir for BK polyomavirus nephropathy

Author:

Imlay Hannah1ORCID,Gnann John W.2,Rooney James3,Peddi V. Ram4,Wiseman Alexander C.5,Josephson Michelle A.6,Kew Clifton7,Young Jo‐Anne H.8ORCID,Adey Deborah B.9,Samaniego‐Picota Milagros10,Whitley Richard J.11ORCID,Limaye Ajit P.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine University of Utah Salt Lake City Utah USA

2. Department of Medicine Medical University of South Carolina University Medical Center Charleston South Carolina USA

3. Gilead Sciences Foster City California USA

4. Department of Transplantation California Pacific Medical Center San Francisco California USA

5. Department of Medicine University of Colorado at Denver Health Sciences Center Denver Colorado USA

6. Department of Medicine University of Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

7. Department of Medicine University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham Alabama USA

8. Department of Medicine University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

9. Department of Medicine University of California at San Francisco San Francisco California USA

10. Department of Medicine University of Wisconsin Medical School Madison Wisconsin USA

11. Department of Pediatrics University of Alabama Birmingham Alabama USA

12. Department of Internal Medicine University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundBK polyomavirus‐associated nephropathy (BKPyVAN) is an important cause of allograft dysfunction and failure in kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) and there are no proven effective treatments. Case reports and in vitro data support the potential activity of cidofovir against BK polyomavirus (BKPyV).MethodsWe report the results of a phase I/II, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled randomized dose‐escalation trial of cidofovir in KTRs with biopsy‐confirmed BKPyVAN and estimated glomerular filtration rate ≥30 mL/min. Intravenous cidofovir (0.25 mg/kg/dose or 0.5 mg/kg/dose) or placebo was administered on days 0, 7, 21, and 35, with final follow‐up through day 49.ResultsThe trial was prematurely discontinued due to slow accrual after 22 KTRs had completed the study. Cidofovir was safe and tolerated at the doses and duration studied. The proportion of subjects with any adverse event (AE) was similar between groups (9/14 [64%] in the combined cidofovir dose groups and 6/8 [75%] in the placebo group); 84% of AEs were mild. BKPyV DNAemia reduction by day 49 was similar between groups (>1 log10 reduction in (2/9 [22.2%] of 0.25 mg/kg group, 1/5 [20%] of 0.5 mg/kg group, and 2/8 [25%] of placebo group).ConclusionsThese preliminary results indicate that low‐dose cidofovir was safe and tolerated but had no significant BKPyV‐specific antiviral effect in KTRs with BKPyVAN. image

Funder

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Publisher

Wiley

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