Conversion to tacrolimus after liver transplantation
- 1 January 1996
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Frontiers Media SA in Transplant International
- Vol. 9 (1) , 23-31
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00336808
Abstract
We have reviewed our experience with conversion to tacrolimus after 435 liver transplantations. Tacrolimus was administered as a rescue agent in 33 patients until October 1993. Indications for rescue therapy were: cholestatic forms of severe, steroid-resistant cellular rejection (n = 8), OKT3-resistant cellular rejections (n = 6), cellular rejections in patients suffering from cyclosporin malabsorption (n = 4), late onset cellular rejections (n = 4), early chronic rejections (n = 3), and chronic vascular or ductopenic rejections (n = 8). Response was evident in 29 of the 33 patients (88%), whereas 4 patients (12%) were nonresponsive. Patient and graft survival were 76% and 70%, respectively. Graft loss with or without patient death occurred in three of eight patients suffering from severe, steroid-resistant cellular rejection, in two of six patients with OKT3-resistant cellular rejections, and in five of eight patients undergoing chronic rejection. In severe steroid-resistant cellular rejection, successful tacrolimus rescue therapy corresponded to a significantly lower total serum bilirubin than unsuccessful therapy (12.0 +/- 5.6 mg% vs 29.7 +/- 5.9 mg%, P < 0.05). We conclude that tacrolimus rescue therapy is a safe and efficient alternative for high-risk cases that do not respond to conservative treatment. In severe, steroid-resistant cellular rejection and in chronic ductopenic rejection, conversion to tacrolimus is beneficial only in a limited number of cases. A predictive parameter, which total serum bilirubin may prove to be in severe, steroid-resistant cellular rejection, is needed to select those cases that might benefit more from retransplantation than from conversion to tacrolimus.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Technique and Results of Biliary Reconstruction Using Side-to-Side Choledochocholedochostomy in 300 Orthotopic Liver TransplantsAnnals of Surgery, 1994
- FK506 CONVERSION THERAPY IN PEDIATRIC LIVER TRANSPLANTATIONTransplantation, 1994
- Extended bile duct resection ? a new oncological approach to the treatment of central bile duct carcinomas?Langenbecks Archives Of Surgery, 1994
- CONVERSION FROM CYCLOSPORINE TO FK506 FOR SALVAGE OF IMMUNOCOMPROMISED PEDIATRIC LIVER ALLOGRAFTS EFFICACY, TOXICITY, AND DOSE REGIMEN IN 23 CHILDRENTransplantation, 1994
- COMPARISON OF QUADRUPLE IMMUNOSUPPRESSION AFTER LIVER TRANSPLANTATION WITH ATG OR IL-2 RECEPTOR ANTIBODYTransplantation, 1993
- MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES IN PROPHYLACTIC IMMUNOSUPPRESSION AFTER LIVER TRANSPLANTATION A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL COMPARING OKT3 AND ANTI-IL-2 RECEPTOR MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY LO-TACT-1Transplantation, 1993
- CONVERSION OF LIVER ALLOGRAFT RECIPIENTS FROM CYCLOSPORINE TO FK506 IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE THERAPY—A CLINICOPATHOLOGIC STUDY OF 96 PATIENTSTransplantation, 1992
- Acute Cellular Rejection Following Liver Transplantation: Clinical Pathologic Features and Effect on OutcomeSeminars in Liver Disease, 1992
- Terminology of Hepatic Allograft Rejection (Glossary)Seminars in Liver Disease, 1992
- A RANDOMIZED CLINICAL TRIAL COMPARING OKT3 AND STEROIDS FOR TREATMENT OF HEPATIC ALLOGRAFT REJECTIONTransplantation, 1987