A PILOT STUDY OF STEROID-FREE IMMUNOSUPPRESSION IN THE PREVENTION OF ACUTE REJECTION IN RENAL ALLOGRAFT RECIPIENTS

Abstract
Corticosteroids have been a mainstay of rejection prophylaxis for several decades, despite the multiple adverse effects of long-term use, including weight gain, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, hypertension, and bone disease. The detrimental effect of steroids on the metabolic profile begins in the early posttransplantation period, and the complete avoidance of steroids in transplantation would therefore be optimal. We hypothesized that the addition of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) and a humanized monoclonal anti-CD25 antibody (daclizumab) to a cyclosporine (CsA microemulsion)-based immunosuppression protocol would permit transplantation without steroids. Steroid-free renal transplantation was attempted in 57 patients treated with daclizumab, MMF, and CsA. Twenty-eight patients received kidneys from living donors; the remaining 29 received cadaveric grafts. At 1 year, patient and graft survival were 95% and 89%, respectively. Fourteen patients (25%) experienced rejections, of which 13 were readily reversed with steroids; 1 patient required OKT3. Mean serum creatinine at 12 months for patients not experiencing rejection was 149±58 μmol/L, compared with 158±102 μmol/L for those experiencing rejection. Five patients required hospitalization for infection; no patients developed lymphoproliferative disease. At baseline, 17 patients required 3 or more antihypertensive medications, compared with 2 patients at 1 year. Three of 43 nondiabetic patients developed diabetes during the study. There was no significant reduction in lumbar or femoral bone density. On the basis of these positive results, we believe steroid avoidance with this immunosuppressive regimen merits further study.