Abstract

Background

Rezafungin is a next-generation echinocandin in development for treatment of candidaemia and invasive candidiasis (IC) and for prevention of invasive fungal disease caused by Candida, Aspergillus and Pneumocystis spp. in blood and marrow transplantation. Rezafungin once-weekly (QWk) was compared to caspofungin once-daily (QD) in two double-blind, randomized, controlled trials in patients with candidaemia and/or IC: STRIVE (Phase 2; NCT02734862) and the recently completed ReSTORE (Phase 3; NCT03667690). STRIVE demonstrated the efficacy and safety profile of rezafungin. ReSTORE showed rezafungin noninferiority to caspofungin for 30 day all-cause mortality (ACM) and global response at Day 14 with comparable safety. Patient-level meta-analyses of efficacy and safety from both trials are presented.

Methods

Details of STRIVE and ReSTORE were previously described. In this analysis of data from both trials, patients who received rezafungin QWk (400 mg in Week 1, then 200 mg) were compared with those who received caspofungin QD (70 mg on Day 1 followed by 50 mg) for ≥14 days (up to 4 weeks). Efficacy endpoints included 30 day ACM (primary US FDA), mycological response at Day 5 (secondary), and time to first negative blood culture (TTNBC) (exploratory). Safety was evaluated by adverse events (AEs).

Results

Groups were well matched (Table 1). Figure 1 shows 30 day ACM (overall and by final diagnosis). Mycological response at Day 5 was 73.4% (102/139) and 64.5% (100/155) in rezafungin and caspofungin groups, respectively (difference=9.5, 95% CI=−0.9, 19.9). In patients with positive blood culture before randomization, median TTNBC was 22.3 h in rezafungin-treated versus 26.3 h in caspofungin-treated patients (stratified log rank p=0.0034, not adjusted for multiplicity). The summary of AEs (Table 2) demonstrates similar outcomes for rezafungin and caspofungin groups.

Conclusions

In the Phase 2/3 patient-level meta-analysis, rezafungin QWk demonstrated efficacy with a similar 30 day ACM rate and safety comparable to that of caspofungin QD. Data for mycological eradication at Day 5 and TTNBC support results from the primary efficacy endpoint and provide initial evidence for the theory that high, front-loaded drug exposure leads to faster fungal clearance. Further analysis of this integrated dataset may provide additional insights on rezafungin efficacy and safety.

Baseline demographics/characteristics in the patient-level meta-analysis of STRIVE and ReSTORE (mITT populationa)

Demographic or characteristic Rezafungin 400 mg/200 mg weekly (N=139) Caspofungin 70 mg/50 mg daily (N=155)
Age, years, mean ± SD (range) 59.8 ± 15.7 (19, 91) 60.8 ± 15.0 (20, 93)
Age <65 years, n (%) 82 (59.0) 92 (59.4)
Age ≥65 years, n (%) 57 (41.0) 63 (40.6)
Female, n (%) 49 (35.3) 65 (41.9)
Race, n (%)
ȃAsian 24 (17.3) 34 (21.9)
ȃBlack or African American 11 (7.9) 8 (5.2)
ȃWhite 95 (68.3) 106 (68.4)
ȃOther/not reported 9 (6.5) 7 (4.5)
Final diagnosis, n (%)
ȃCandidaemia 100 (71.9) 115 (74.2)
ȃInvasive candidiasisb 39 (28.1) 40 (25.8)
Modified APACHE II score, n (%)c
ȃ≥20 21 (15.1) 26 (16.8)
ȃ<20 116 (83.5) 126 (81.3)

mITT, modified ITT.

mITT population: patients with positive cultures from blood or another normally sterile site ≤96 h before randomization.

IC group includes some subjects with deep tissue infection and candidaemia.

Reported for patients with APACHE II score data available.

Summary of TEAE data from the patient-level meta-analysis of STRIVE and ReSTORE (safety population)

Parameter Number of subjects (%)
Rezafungin 400 mg/200 mg weekly (N=151) Caspofungin 70 mg/50 mg daily (N=166)
≥1 TEAE 138 (91.4) 138 (83.1)
Study drug-related TEAE 22 (14.6) 18 (10.8)
Serious TEAE 83 (55.0) 81 (48.8)
TEAE leading to study drug discontinuation 14 (9.3) 15 (9.0)

TEAE, treatment-emergent adverse event.

Details

Title
P22 Patient-level meta-analysis of efficacy and safety from STRIVE and ReSTORE: randomized, double-blinded, multicentre Phase 2 and Phase 3 trials of rezafungin in the treatment of candidaemia and/or invasive candidiasis
Author
Soriano, A 1 ; Thompson, G R, III 2 ; Cornely, O A 3 ; Kullberg, B J 4 ; Kollef, M 5 ; Vazquez, J 6 ; Honore, P M 7 ; Bassetti, M 8 ; Pullman, J 9 ; Dignani, C 10 ; Das, A F 11 ; Sandison, T 11 ; Pappas, P G 12 

 Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, IDIBAPS, University of Barcelona , Spain 
 University of California Davis Medical Center , Davis, CA , USA 
 University of Cologne, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne, Department I of Internal Medicine, Excellence Center for Medical Mycology (ECMM) , Cologne , Germany 
 Radboud University Medical Center , Nijmegen , The Netherlands 
 Washington University , St Louis, MO , USA 
 Augusta University , Augusta, GA , USA 
 Brugman University Hospital , Brussels , Belgium 
 University of Genoa , Genoa , Italy 
 Mercury Street Medical , Butte, MT , USA 
10  PSI-CRO , Durham, NC , USA 
11  Cidara Therapeutics Inc. , San Diego, CA , USA 
12  University of Alabama at Birmingham , Birmingham, AL , USA 
Publication year
2023
Publication date
Feb 2023
Publisher
Oxford University Press
e-ISSN
26321823
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3170152188
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.