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Use of Viral Load as a Surrogate Marker in Clinical Studies of Cytomegalovirus in Solid Organ Transplantation: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

Authors :
Gary Fahle
Robin K. Avery
Debra Birnkrant
Jeffrey C. Murray
Yoshihiko Murata
Mary Singer
Randi Y. Leavitt
Hans H. Hirsch
Lynn Fallon
Francisco Martinez-Murillo
John E. McKinnon
Gavin Cloherty
Randall Lanier
Rekha Abichandani
Philip R. Krause
Sally Mossman
M Michelle Berrey
Wael Saber
Ali Alghamdi
John A. D. Leake
Raymund R. Razonable
Takashi E. Komatsu
Emily A. Blumberg
Mahmood Tazari
Kurt Gunter
Thomas Mertens
Jens D Lundgren
Yoichiro Natori
Sunwen Chou
Kevin Modarress
Jay Erdman
Li Li
Terry Bowlin
Peter W. Hunt
William Cruikshank
Anna Wijatyk
Frank Kuhr
Garrett Nichols
Aimee Hodowanec
Marcie L. Riches
Shahid Husain
Karl S. Peggs
Jules O'Rear
Johann Mols
Filip Josephson
Christopher Lademacher
Paul Baum
Bernhardt Zeiher
Paul D. Griffiths
Susan Barnett
Mark N. Prichard
Michael Boeckh
Roy F. Chemaly
Megan McCutcheon
Thomas Stamminger
Fausto Baldanti
Chalom Sayada
Veronica Miller
Andreas Pikis
Atul Humar
Dimitri Gonzalez
Barbara D. Alexander
Jennifer Brooks
Jeff Roberts
Camille N. Kotton
Hermann Einsele
Tadd Lazarus
David Boutolleau
Deepali Kumar
Sandra Nusinoff Lehrman
Ani Orchanian-Cheff
Howard Mayer
Heather Gillis
Dong Yu
David Murawski
Per Ljungman
Paula Isabelle Lodding
Lesia K. Dropulic
Source :
Clinical Infectious Diseases. 66:617-631
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2017.

Abstract

Symptomatic cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease has been the standard endpoint for clinical trials in organ transplant recipients. Viral load may be a more relevant endpoint due to low frequency of disease. We performed a meta-analysis and systematic review of the literature. We found several lines of evidence to support the validity of viral load as an appropriate surrogate end-point, including the following: (1) viral loads in CMV disease are significantly greater than in asymptomatic viremia (odds ratio, 9.3 95% confidence interval, 4.6-19.3); (2) kinetics of viral replication are strongly associated with progression to disease; (3) pooled incidence of CMV viremia and disease is significantly lower during prophylaxis compared with the full patient follow-up period (viremia incidence: 3.2% vs 34.3%; P < .001) (disease incidence: 1.1% vs 13.0%; P < .001); (4) treatment of viremia prevented disease; and (5) viral load decline correlated with symptom resolution. Based on the analysis, we conclude that CMV load is an appropriate surrogate endpoint for CMV trials in organ transplant recipients.

Details

ISSN :
15376591 and 10584838
Volume :
66
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ad9869816a9bd64d42d0d7ab0a61e725
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/cix793