EFFICACY OF TACROLIMUS AS RESCUE THERAPY FOR CHRONIC REJECTION IN ORTHOTOPIC LIVER TRANSPLANTATION
- 1 July 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 64 (2) , 258-263
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-199707270-00014
Abstract
A study was performed by 17 different U.S. liver transplantation centers to determine the safety and efficacy of conversion from cyclosporine to tacrolimus for chronic allograft rejection. Ninety-one patients were converted to tacrolimus a mean of 319 days after liver transplantation. The indication for conversion was ongoing chronic rejection confirmed by biochemical and histologic criteria. Patients were followed for a mean of 251 days until the end of the study. Sixty-four patients (70.3%) were alive with their initial hepatic allograft at the conclusion of the study period and were defined as the responder group. Twenty-seven patients (29.7%) failed to respond to treatment, and 20 of them required a second liver graft. The actuarial graft survival for the total patient group was 69.9% and 48.5% at 1 and 2 years, respectively. The actuarial patient survival at 1 and 2 years was 84.4% and 81.2%, respectively. Two significant positive prognostic factors were identified. Patients with a total bilirubin of ≤10 mg/dl at the time of conversion had a significantly better graft and patient survival than patients converted with a total bilirubin >10 mg/dl (P=0.00002 and P=0.00125, respectively). The time between liver transplantation and conversion also affected graft and patient survival. Patients converted to tacrolimus ≤90 days after transplantation had a 1-year actuarial graft and patient survival of 51.9% and 65.9%, respectively, compared with 73.2% and 87.7% for those converted >90 days after transplantation. The mean total bilirubin level for the responder group was 7.1 mg/dl at the time of conversion and decreased significantly to a mean of 3.4 mg/dl at the end of the study (P=0.0018). Thirteen patients (14.3%) died during the study. Sepsis was the major contributing cause of death in most of these patients. Our results suggest that conversion to tacrolimus for chronic rejection after orthotopic liver transplantation represents an effective therapeutic option. Conversion to tacrolimus before development of elevated total bilirubin levels showed a significant impact on long-term outcome.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Comparison of Tacrolimus (FK 506) and Cyclosporine for Immunosuppression in Liver TransplantationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1994
- CONVERSION OF LIVER ALLOGRAFT RECIPIENTS FROM CYCLOSPORINE TO FK506 IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE THERAPY—A CLINICOPATHOLOGIC STUDY OF 96 PATIENTSTransplantation, 1992
- Severe Ductopenic Rejection Following Liver Transplantation: Incidence, Time of Onset, Risk Factors, Treatment, and OutcomeSeminars in Liver Disease, 1992
- Current concepts in cell-mediated hepatic allograft rejection leading to ductopenia and liver failureHepatology, 1991
- Chronic rejection after liver transplantation: A study of clinical, histopathological and immunological featuresHepatology, 1991
- VANISHING BILE-DUCT SYNDROME FOLLOWING LIVER TRANSPLANTATION—IS IT REVERSIBLE?Transplantation, 1991
- EVIDENCE THAT THE VANISHING BILE DUCT SYNDROME IS VANISHINGTransplantation, 1990
- CYTOMEGALOVIRUS INFECTION AND DONOR/RECIPIENT HLA ANTIGENS: INTERDEPENDENT CO-FACTORS IN PATHOGENESIS OF VANISHING BILEDUCT SYNDROME AFTER LIVER TRANSPLANTATIONThe Lancet, 1988
- The acute vanishing bile duct syndrome (acute irreversible rejection) after orthotopic liver transplantationHepatology, 1987
- Histopathology of Early and Late Human Hepatic Allograft Rejection: Evidence of Progressive Destruction of Interlobular Bile DuctsHepatology, 1985