MULTICENTER TRIAL EXPLORING CALCINEURIN INHIBITORS AVOIDANCE IN RENAL TRANSPLANTATION
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- 1 May 2001
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 71 (9) , 1282-1287
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-200105150-00017
Abstract
The adoption of calcineurin inhibitors (CNI) as the mainstay of immunosuppression has resulted in a significant decrease of acute rejection and improvement of short-term graft survival. However, because of the irreversible nephrotoxicity associated with the chronic use of the CNI, the magnitude of the improvement of long-term graft survival has been more modest. Therefore, an effective immunosuppression regimen that does not rely on CNI may result in improvement of long-term outcome and simplification of the management of transplant recipients. Ninety-eight patients of primary cadaver or living donor kidneys at low immunologic risk were enrolled in a CNI avoidance study. The immunosuppression regimen consisted of daclizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody that binds to the alpha chain of the interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2Rα), administered for a total of five doses at biweekly intervals; 3 gm/day mycophenolate mofetil for the first 6 months and 2 gm thereafter; and conventional corticosteroid therapy. Patients who underwent rejection episodes could be started on CNI. The primary efficacy endpoint was biopsy-proven rejection during the first 6 months posttransplant. Biopsy-proven rejection was diagnosed in 48% of patients during the first 6 months after transplantation. The majority of rejection episodes were Banff grade I and IIA and were fully reversed with corticosteroid therapy. The median time to the first biopsy-proven rejection among patients who experienced this event during the first 6 months was 39 days. In 22 patients with delayed graft function, the proportion of patients with biopsy-proven rejection was 50% at 6 months. However in the first 2 weeks posttransplant, only 1 of 22 patients with delayed graft function developed biopsy-proven rejection. At 1 year, patient survival was 97% and graft survival was 96%. Only two grafts were lost secondary to rejection. At 1-year posttransplant, 62% of patients had received CNI for more than 7 days. At 1-year posttransplant, the mean serum creatinine in the nonrejectors with no CNI use was 113 μmol/L (95%, confidence interval [CI], 100.7 to 125.3 μmol/L) and in the rejectors or patients with CNI use (more than 7 days) was 154 μmol/L (95% CI, 135.0 to 173.0 μmol/L). In selected patients with rejection, analysis of circulating and intragraft lymphocytes revealed complete IL-2Rα saturation. This CNI avoidance study in immunologic low-risk patients, while only partially successful in preventing acute rejection, provided benefits to a sizable minority of patients who have not required chronic CNI therapy. However, wide acceptance of a CNI-sparing immunosuppression regimen may require a lower rate of acute rejection, possibly through the addition of a non-nephrotoxic dose of CNI. However, because complete IL-2Rα blockade was present during rejection, it can be assumed that alternative pathways, such as IL-15, may be responsible for the rejection; thus, the incorporation of non-nephrotoxic immunosuppressive agents, such as sirolimus, may provide a more strategic approach.Keywords
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