» Articles » PMID: 20455882

Everolimus Plus Reduced-exposure CsA Versus Mycophenolic Acid Plus Standard-exposure CsA in Renal-transplant Recipients

Overview
Journal Am J Transplant
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty General Surgery
Date 2010 May 12
PMID 20455882
Citations 63
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Everolimus allows calcineurin-inhibitor reduction without loss of efficacy and may improve renal-transplant outcomes. In a 24-month, open-label study, 833 de novo renal-transplant recipients were randomized to everolimus 1.5 or 3.0 mg/day (target troughs 3-8 and 6-12 ng/mL, respectively) with reduced-exposure CsA, or mycophenolic acid (MPA) 1.44 g/day plus standard-exposure CsA. Patients received basiliximab +/- corticosteroids. The primary endpoint was composite efficacy failure (treated biopsy-proven acute rejection, graft loss, death or loss to follow-up) and the main safety endpoint was renal function (estimated glomerular filtration rate [eGFR], by Modification of Diet in Renal Disease [MDRD]) at Month 12 (last-observation-carried-forward analyses). Month 12 efficacy failure rates were noninferior in the everolimus 1.5 mg (25.3%) and 3.0 mg (21.9%) versus MPA (24.2%) groups. Mean eGFR at Month 12 was noninferior in the everolimus groups versus the MPA group (54.6 and 51.3 vs 52.2 mL/min/1.73 m(2) in the everolimus 1.5 mg, 3.0 mg and MPA groups, respectively; 95% confidence intervals for everolimus 1.5 mg and 3.0 mg vs MPA: -1.7, 6.4 and -5.0, 3.2, respectively). The overall incidence of adverse events was comparable between groups. The use of everolimus with progressive reduction in CsA exposure, up to 60% at 1 year, resulted in similar efficacy and renal function compared with standard-exposure CsA plus MPA.

Citing Articles

Interventions for BK virus infection in kidney transplant recipients.

Wajih Z, Karpe K, Walters G Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2024; 10:CD013344.

PMID: 39382091 PMC: 11462636. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD013344.pub2.


A review of landmark studies on maintenance immunosuppressive regimens in kidney transplantation.

Udomkarnjananun S, Schagen M, Hesselink D Asian Biomed (Res Rev News). 2024; 18(3):92-108.

PMID: 39175954 PMC: 11338012. DOI: 10.2478/abm-2024-0015.


Renal function at 12 months of kidney transplantation comparing tacrolimus and mycophenolate with tacrolimus and mTORi in donors with different KDPI ranges. A multicenter cohort study using propensity scoring.

Rodrigues A, Tanno M, Contti M, Nga H, Valiatti M, Costa S Front Transplant. 2024; 2:1279940.

PMID: 38993903 PMC: 11235318. DOI: 10.3389/frtra.2023.1279940.


A comparative analysis of clinical outcomes between conversion to mTOR inhibitor and calcineurin inhibitor reduction in managing BK viremia among kidney transplant patients.

Cho A, Park S, Han A, Ha J, Park J, Lee K Sci Rep. 2024; 14(1):12855.

PMID: 38834615 PMC: 11150265. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-60695-2.


Effectiveness and safety of immunosuppressive regimens used as maintenance therapy in kidney transplantation: The CESIT study.

Bellini A, Finocchietti M, Rosa A, Nordio M, Ferroni E, Massari M PLoS One. 2024; 19(1):e0295205.

PMID: 38165971 PMC: 10760756. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0295205.