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RECRUITING
NCT06118515
PHASE1

A Safety Assessment of Oral Letermovir in Infants With Symptomatic Congenital Cytomegalovirus

Sponsor: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This is a Phase 1 single-arm open-label study of letermovir in neonates with symptomatic congenital Cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease. There will be two groups enrolled. Group 1 will be comprised of 4 subjects. Following documentation study inclusion and signing of informed consent, Group 1 subjects will receive one dose of oral letermovir (Study Day 0), using the dose bands. A full pharmacokinetics (PK) profile will then be obtained over the next 24 hours, and blood specimens will be shipped immediately to the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Pharmacokinetic Lab and processed in real time. Within = 7 days, pharmacokinetics (PK) results will be conveyed to the study site. If the Area Under the Curve (AUC24) is =100,000 ngxhr/mL (see footnote a in Table 1), the subject will initiate a 14-day course of once-daily oral letermovir at the same dose as utilized on Dose Finding Day. This duration of letermovir therapy was selected based upon our earlier observation in this population that patients with symptomatic congenital Cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease who achieve viral suppression to =2.5 log by day 14 of valganciclovir therapy and then maintain it over the next 4 months are statistically more likely to have improved hearing across the first two years of life (22). If the observed letermovir exposure of the subject is \> 100,000 ngxhr/mL, the once-daily oral letermovir dose that will be used will be adjusted down in 2.5 mg increments. Oral valganciclovir (16 mg/kg/dose BID) will begin within the first month of life, as standard of care; initiation of valganciclovir can be concomitant with or prior to initiation of the 14-day course of letermovir (but will not start before obtaining the pharmacokinetics (PK) specimens following the single dose of letermovir on the Dose Finding Day). This is similar to the intensification approach that has been evaluated in the management of patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (23-25). The day that the 14-day course of letermovir begins for Group 1 subjects will be known as Study Day 1. Serial blood samples will be obtained on Study Days 1, 5, 10, and 14 for safety chemistry and hematology labs and for Cytomegalovirus (CMV) viral loads. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) viral load will be followed as well on Study Days 21 and 42 to assess for rebound in Cytomegalovirus (CMV) following cessation of letermovir treatment on Study Day 14. Saliva and urine viral loads will be followed at these timepoint as well. Full pharmacokinetics (PK) profiles for both letermovir and ganciclovir will be obtained on Study Day 10. In addition, sparse pharmacokinetics (PK) sampling will be obtained on Study Days 1, 5, and 14. Adverse events will be assessed at each study visit during treatment, and at Study Days 21 and 42 (4 weeks after the last study drug dose). Subjects then will continue on oral valganciclovir as routine clinical care to complete an anticipated 6 month duration of total therapy. The primary Objective is to determine the systemic exposure (AUC24) of letermovir following administration of oral letermovir granules in infants with symptomatic congenital CMV disease.

Official title: A Phase I Pharmacokinetic and Safety Assessment of Oral Letermovir in Infants With Symptomatic Congenital Cytomegalovirus Disease

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

0 Days - 90 Days

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

12

Start Date

2025-02-19

Completion Date

2026-08-31

Last Updated

2026-04-03

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DRUG

Letermovir

Letermovir is a novel inhibitor targeting the cytomegalovirus (CMV) viral enzyme, effectively disrupting the production of additional CMV virions. Letermovir has demonstrated potent, selective, and reversible inhibition of CMV activity in preclinical studies.

Locations (10)

Children's of Alabama Child Health Research Unit (CHRU)

Birmingham, Alabama, United States

Children's National Medical Center - Sheikh Zayed Campus - Infectious Disease

Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States

Emory University School of Medicine

Atlanta, Georgia, United States

University of Louisville School of Medicine - Norton Children's Hospital - Infectious Diseases

Louisville, Kentucky, United States

Louisiana State University Health Shreveport - Infectious Diseases

Shreveport, Louisiana, United States

University of Minnesota - Pediatric Infectious Disease

Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States

SUNY Upstate Medical University Hospital - Pediatrics

Syracuse, New York, United States

Nationwide Children's Hosp.-Neonatology-Ctr. for Perinatal Rsrch.

Columbus, Ohio, United States

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center - Pediatrics

Dallas, Texas, United States

Medical College of Wisconsin

Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States