Sirolimus (SRL) has long been known as an antineoplastic agent and has played an important role as an adjuvant immunosuppressant in kidney transplant recipients who are high-risk candidates for Calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) based regimen such as those with history of active malignancy after the induction phase. Very little is known about its efficacy as compared to CNI’s in prolonging graft function and preventing acute and chronic rejection when they are used as primary immunosuppression agents in the post induction phase. Weir et al tried to investigate the efficacy of SRL based CNI free regimen in its head to head comparison with a CNI based regimen
In their Multicentric randomized control trial, 305 kidney transplant recipients receiving either Cyclosporine (Cys A) or Tacrolimus with Mycophenolate Mofetil (MMF) were randomized in their post induction phase into CNI continuation plus MMF or SRL plus MMF arms. Both the arms were similar in terms of demographics; African American composition and most patients in both arms were moderate risk for allograft rejection. Patients in both the arms were followed for 24 months for a primary end point of mean percentage change of Iothalamate based measured GFR at 12 months and secondary end points of measured GFR at 24 months, eGFR, biopsy proven acute rejection (BPAR) and patient or physician reported adverse effects. The authors found a significant higher mean % change in GFR (p-value 0.012) at 12 months in the SRL /MMF arm as compared to CNI/MMF based arm in their Intention to treat analysis. The difference became insignificant at 24 months (p-value 0.5). The difference was less significant in the per protocol analyses. The SRL arm had significantly more incidence of adverse events like mouth ulcerations, hypertriglyceridemia, higher proteinuria but no significant difference in biopsy proven acute rejection(BPAR)’s was found. In addition, they reported a significant 6 deaths in the CNI based arm as compared to none in the SRL arm
The study was one of the first ones comparing CNI and SRL based regimens head to head. In spite of the observed higher GFR’s attained in SRL arms, the study suffered major drawbacks. Being a non-inferiority study, the observations would have been much more compelling had the significant differences been found in both the per-protocol and intention to treat analyses and at both 12 and 24 month period. In addition, about 77 participants switched from the SRL arm to the CNI arm during the 24-month study duration and might have directly affected the results in case the change of regimen was from an adverse reaction or intolerance. Also, the mean Tacrolimus and Cys A trough levels were on the higher side after the 6 month post transplant period, falsely decreasing the GFR’s in the CNI arms. The lack of significance in BPAR’s and the cause of 6 deaths in the CNI arms not being directly related to the medications per se further undermine the overall safety differences.
Also, protocol biopsies would have been helpful to help out with the differences.
SRL might be important medication in high-risk patients and those unable to tolerate the CNI’s but more studies are required to definitively prove the efficacy of CNI’s in preserving GFR’s and preventing BPAR’s when used as a primary agent.
Reference-
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21191361
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21792049
Post by Dr. Ashish Kataria,
Nephrology Fellow, Hofstra NSLIJ, NY
Showing posts with label tacrolimus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tacrolimus. Show all posts
Monday, November 7, 2011
Saturday, August 6, 2011
Green tea and Tacrolimus
Its seems like tacrolimus gets in trouble with lot of things. Since its a substrate for the P450 system, it is good to monitor with any new medication.
Recent report suggests that green tea might increase tacrolimus levels. In this particular case discussed in AJKD, poor metabolism was also a culprit but green tea is something to watch out for.
Take a look
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21787983
Recent report suggests that green tea might increase tacrolimus levels. In this particular case discussed in AJKD, poor metabolism was also a culprit but green tea is something to watch out for.
Take a look
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21787983
Labels:
drug toxicities,
green tea,
In The News,
Medications,
tacrolimus,
transplantation
Monday, July 18, 2011
Advagraf Study
There has been talk about using prograf once a day for quite sometime now. When it is used once a day its a tacrolimus prolonged use and its called Advagraf. A recent multicenter, 1:1-randomized, parallel-group, noninferiority study compared the efficacy of twice a day tacrolimus to advagraf.; combined with steroids and low-dose mycophenolate mofetil without antibody induction, in 667 de novo kidney transplant recipients.
Per paper:
Biopsy-proven acute rejection rate at 24 weeks was 15.8% for Tacrolimus BID versus 20.4% for Tacrolimus QD (p = 0.182; treatment ).
Kaplan-Meier 12-month patient and graft survival rates were 97.5% and 92.8% for Tacrolimus BID and 96.9% and 91.5% for QD.
Both treatment groups showed equally well-maintained renal function at 12 months by GFR
Overall, it was not inferior to twice a day dosing.
The original Ref is at:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20840480
Per paper:
Biopsy-proven acute rejection rate at 24 weeks was 15.8% for Tacrolimus BID versus 20.4% for Tacrolimus QD (p = 0.182; treatment ).
Kaplan-Meier 12-month patient and graft survival rates were 97.5% and 92.8% for Tacrolimus BID and 96.9% and 91.5% for QD.
Both treatment groups showed equally well-maintained renal function at 12 months by GFR
Overall, it was not inferior to twice a day dosing.
The original Ref is at:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20840480
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