STUDY OBJECTIVE: To compare the effects of different calcineurin inhibitors on sirolimus pharmacokinetics during long-term, staggered administration in kidney transplant recipients. Design. Randomized, open-label, parallel-group trial. SETTING:A medical center and one of its teaching hospitals in Taiwan. PATIENTS: Twenty-two de novo kidney transplant recipients. INTERVENTION: Patients received cyclosporine microemulsion or tacrolimus capsules twice/day in combination with once-daily sirolimus solution and corticosteroids. Sirolimus was administered 6 hours after the morning dose of cyclosporine or tacrolimus. After receiving a 6-mg loading dose of sirolimus, participants received sirolimus 2 mg/day for at least 7 days. Neither the cyclosporine nor the tacrolimus dosage was adjusted for at least 3 days before and during blood sampling for pharmacokinetic profiling. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: One patient dropped out because of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole-related hepatotoxicity. We observed no differences between the two patient groups in terms of their demographic data, renal and liver function, or dosage of sirolimus during the study. During multiple-dose administration, the area under the whole-blood concentration-time curve and the peak and trough concentrations of sirolimus in the cyclosporine group were, respectively, 1.46 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.21-1.71), 1.42 (95% CI 1.08-1.76), and 1.42 (95% CI 1.09-1.76) times higher than those of the tacrolimus group, even though sirolimus was administered 6 hours after the other agents. CONCLUSION:Sirolimus pharmacokinetics may change significantly when calcineurin inhibitors are switched, even with staggered administration, which may not completely prevent a drug interaction between cyclosporine and sirolimus solution.
RCT Entities:
STUDY OBJECTIVE: To compare the effects of different calcineurin inhibitors on sirolimus pharmacokinetics during long-term, staggered administration in kidney transplant recipients. Design. Randomized, open-label, parallel-group trial. SETTING: A medical center and one of its teaching hospitals in Taiwan. PATIENTS: Twenty-two de novo kidney transplant recipients. INTERVENTION: Patients received cyclosporine microemulsion or tacrolimus capsules twice/day in combination with once-daily sirolimus solution and corticosteroids. Sirolimus was administered 6 hours after the morning dose of cyclosporine or tacrolimus. After receiving a 6-mg loading dose of sirolimus, participants received sirolimus 2 mg/day for at least 7 days. Neither the cyclosporine nor the tacrolimus dosage was adjusted for at least 3 days before and during blood sampling for pharmacokinetic profiling. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: One patient dropped out because of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole-related hepatotoxicity. We observed no differences between the two patient groups in terms of their demographic data, renal and liver function, or dosage of sirolimus during the study. During multiple-dose administration, the area under the whole-blood concentration-time curve and the peak and trough concentrations of sirolimus in the cyclosporine group were, respectively, 1.46 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.21-1.71), 1.42 (95% CI 1.08-1.76), and 1.42 (95% CI 1.09-1.76) times higher than those of the tacrolimus group, even though sirolimus was administered 6 hours after the other agents. CONCLUSION:Sirolimus pharmacokinetics may change significantly when calcineurin inhibitors are switched, even with staggered administration, which may not completely prevent a drug interaction between cyclosporine and sirolimus solution.
Authors: Asher D Schachter; Mark R Benfield; Robert J Wyatt; Paul C Grimm; Robert S Fennell; John T Herrin; David S Lirenman; Ruth A McDonald; Ricardo Munoz-Arizpe; William E Harmon Journal: Pediatr Transplant Date: 2006-12