| Literature DB >> 17543783 |
Bruno Meiser1, Ingo Kaczmarek, M Mueller, Jan Groetzner, Michael Weis, Andreas Knez, Hans-Ullrich Stempfle, Volker Klauss, Michael Schmoeckel, Bruno Reichart, Peter Ueberfuhr.
Abstract
Heart transplant recipients treated with long-term calcineurin inhibitors (CNIs) experience significant nephrotoxicity and transplant vasculopathy. Signal proliferation inhibitors might prevent the development of transplant vasculopathy. In an open, prospective pilot study, 33 primary heart transplant recipients received tacrolimus (Tac) and sirolimus (rapamycin, Rapa) with steroids. To reduce both nephrotoxicity and transplant vasculopathy at the same time, both Tac and Rapa exposure was kept low (6 to 8 ng/ml). Steroids were withdrawn successfully from all patients within 6 months. Just one acute rejection occurred at 54 days post-transplant, resulting in 0.03 acute rejection episode per patient at 1-year (primary end-point) and 2-year follow-up. Transplant vasculopathy assessed by angiogram was absent at 2 years. Graft and patient survival were 100% at 1 and 2 years. Accordingly, the survival estimate for freedom from first acute rejection, transplant vasculopathy, graft loss or death was 0.97 at 1 and 2 years. The regimen was well tolerated with only 3 patients requiring a change of study medication. Mean serum creatinine increased during the first year but returned to baseline at 2 years.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17543783 DOI: 10.1016/j.healun.2007.03.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Heart Lung Transplant ISSN: 1053-2498 Impact factor: 10.247