| Literature DB >> 24382994 |
Stephan W Hirt1, Christoph Bara2, Markus J Barten3, Tobias Deuse4, Andreas O Doesch5, Ingo Kaczmarek6, Uwe Schulz7, Jörg Stypmann8, Assad Haneya9, Hans B Lehmkuhl10.
Abstract
The evidence base relating to the use of everolimus in heart transplantation has expanded considerably in recent years, providing clinically relevant information regarding its use in clinical practice. Unless there are special considerations to take into account, all de novo heart transplant patients can be regarded as potential candidates for immunosuppression with everolimus and reduced-exposure calcineurin inhibitor therapy. Caution about the use of everolimus immediately after transplantation should be exercised in certain patients with the risk of severe proteinuria, with poor wound healing, or with uncontrolled severe hyperlipidemia. Initiation of everolimus in the early phase aftertransplant is not advisable in patients with severe pretransplant end-organ dysfunction or in patients on a left ventricular assist device beforetransplant who are at high risk of infection or of wound healing complications. The most frequent reason for introducing everolimus in maintenance heart transplant patients is to support minimization or withdrawal of calcineurin inhibitor therapy, for example, due to impaired renal function or malignancy. Due to its potential to inhibit the progression of cardiac allograft vasculopathy and to reduce cytomegalovirus infection, everolimus should be initiated as soon as possible after heart transplantation. Immediate and adequate reduction of CNI exposure is mandatory from the start of everolimus therapy.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24382994 PMCID: PMC3870122 DOI: 10.1155/2013/683964
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transplant ISSN: 2090-0007
Clinical studies of everolimus versus azathioprine or mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) in de novo heart transplant recipients.
| Study | Design | Primary endpoint | Everolimus | Comparator | CsA | Induction therapy | Steroids |
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| B253 [ | 24-month Multicenter Randomized Double-blind for months 0–12, open-label for months 12–24 | Composite efficacy failure at 6 months | Fixed-dosea 1.5 mg/day ( | Azathioprinea 1–3 mg/kg/day ( | All 3 groups: | In individual centers only: | Prednisolone, initiated at 0.5–1.0 mg/kg/day, tapered to achieve 0.3–0.5 mg/kg/day by day 21 and ≥0.1 mg/kg/day by month 6 |
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Lehmkuhl et al. 2007 [ | 12-month | Not applicable | Initial dose before transplant 0.75 mg, then mean 1.5–1.75 mg/day, and | MMF before transplant 1.0 g, then mean 1.5–2.5 g/day ( | Everolimus versus MMF: | ATG 2.5 mg/kg/day on days 1 and 2 | Initially, high-dose methylprednisolone, then prednisolone 1 mg/kg/day, tapered to achieve 0.1 mg/kg/day by month 12 |
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| A2411 [ | 12-month Multicenter | Noninferiority of renal function (calculated creatinine clearance at 6 months) | Initial dosea 1.5 mg/day, | MMFa 3.0 g/day | Everolimus versus MMF: | Antithymocyte antibodies (68.4% of patients) or | Prednisone, tapered to achieve ≥0.1 mg/kg/day by month 6 and 0.1–0.05 mg/kg/day from month 6 to 12 |
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| A2310 [ | 24 months | Noninferiority of composite efficacy failure at 12 months IVUS substudy: change in mean MIT at 12 months | Initial dosea 1.5 mg/day, | MMFa 3.0 g/day | Everolimus versus MMF: | Center-specific: | Yes, according to local practice |
ATG: antithymocyte globulin; CsA: cyclosporine; IL-2RA: interleukin-2 receptor antibody; IVUS: intravascular ultrasound; MIT: maximum intimal thickness.
aFirst dose administered within 72 hours after transplant surgery.
Efficacy endpoints in randomized trials of everolimus with reduced-exposure cyclosporine versus MMF with standard-exposure cyclosporine.
| Parameter | A2310 [ | A2411 [ | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 months | 24 months | 12 months | ||||
| MMF | Everolimus 1.5 mg | MMF | Everolimus 1.5 mg | MMF | Everolimus 1.5 mg | |
| Number of patients | 271 | 282 | 271 | 282 | 84 | 92 |
| Composite efficacy failurea, % | 33.6 | 35.1b | 41.3 | 39.4c | 41.7 | 32.6 |
| AR associated with HDC, % | 2.6 | 3.9 | 5.2 | 4.3 | 1.2 | 2.2 |
| BPAR, ISHLT grade ≥ 3A, % | 24.7 | 22.3 | 27.3 | 24.1 | 29.8 | 22.8d |
| BPAR treated with antibody, % | No data | No data | No data | No data | 2.4 | 5.4 |
| Graft loss/re-transplant, % | 1.8 | 1.4 | 3.7 | 2.5 | Composite: 11.9 | Composite: 10.9 |
| Death, % | 4.8 | 7.8e | 9.2 | 10.6e | ||
| Loss to followup, % | 3.7 | 3.2 | 5.2 | 3.5 | No data | No data |
AR: acute rejection; BPAR: biopsy proven acute rejection; HDC: hemodynamic compromise; ISHLT: International Society of Heart and Lung Transplantation; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil.
aDefined as BPAR grade ≥ 3A (or any BPAR in A2310), acute rejection associated with hemodynamic compromise, graft loss/retransplant, death, or loss to followup.
b P = 0.002 for noninferiority (noninferiority margin 13%); P = 0.705 for no-difference test.
cNoninferior to the MMF group (noninferiority margin 13%).
d P = 0.005 for noninferiority.
eIncluding one death in a patient who never received everolimus.
Results of intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) substudies in randomized trials of everolimus with reduced-exposure cyclosporine versus MMF with standard-exposure cyclosporine.
| Parameter | A2310 [ | B253 [ | ||||
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| MMF | Everolimus 1.5 mg |
| Azathioprine | Everolimus 1.5 mg/3.0 mg |
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| Number of patients | ||||||
| 12 months | 101 | 88 | 72 | 70/69 | ||
| 24 months | — | — | 60 | 45/44 | ||
| Mean change in MIT from baseline, mm | ||||||
| 12 months | 0.07 ± 0.11 | 0.03 ± 0.05 | <0.00 | 0.10 | 0.04/0.03 | 0.01/0.003 |
| 24 months | — | — | 1 | 0.15 | 0.07/0.06 | 0.014/0.004 |
| Patients with CAV, % | ||||||
| 12 months | 26.7 | 12.5 | 0.018 | 52.8 | 35.7/30.4 | 0.045/0.01 |
| 24 months | — | — | 58.3 | 33.3/45.5 | 0.017/n.s. | |
CAV: cardiac allograft vasculopathy, defined as a change in MIT ≥ 0.5 mm as assessed by intravascular ultrasound (IVUS); MIT: maximal intimal thickness; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil.
Patient selection for everolimus-based immunosuppression in de novo heart transplant recipients*.
| Category | Remarks |
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| Everolimus | |
| All | Checking all patients for possibility of everolimus therapy due to its potential to reduce CNI-related toxicity, CMV infection, and malignancy risk and CAV |
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| Everolimus only with special care | |
| Specific risks for renal impairment or creatinine increase | Reduceing CsA exposure to a minimum, monitoring urine electrophoresis and proteinuria, and stopping everolimus in the event of proteinuria > 1 g/day and/or signs of new glomerular damage on urine electrophoresis |
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| Risks for wound healing disorders (diabetes mellitus, obese patients, high steroid exposure, and ventricular assist device) | Delay initiation of everolimus until completion of wound healing and resolution of any bacterial or fungal infection |
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| Uncontrolled severe hyperlipidemia | Delay initiation of everolimus until serum lipids have been controlled |
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| Everolimus not appropriate | |
| (i) Paracorporal biventricular assist device with immanent risk of infection | Avoid antilymphocyte antibodies for induction in patients with elevated risk for early postoperative infection |
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| Latent bacterial or fungal infections | Everolimus may be unsuitable in individual cases based on benefit/risk assessment |
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| High probability of reoperation or necessity for additional surgery in the initial phase | Considering late initiation of everolimus to avoid the need to switch immunosuppressive regimen during a critical period |
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| GFR < 40 mL/min/1.73 m2 if slope shows an ongoing deterioration of renal function | Delay initiation of everolimus |
*Initiation within 72 hours after transplantation.
CAV: cardiac allograft vasculopathy; CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; CsA: cyclosporine; GFR: glomerular filtration rate; LVAD: left ventricular assist device.
Overview of selected everolimus-associated adverse events.
| Adverse event | Comment | Prevention/intervention |
|---|---|---|
| Dyslipidemia | Comedication with lipid-lowering medication is mandatory (statin not interacting with CYP450 e.g. fluvastatin, or fibrates) | |
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| Pancytopenia | In unexplained cytopenia (white blood cells, red cells, platelets), everolimus may be the cause and dose reduction or temporary cessation may be indicated | |
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| Acne | Improves within a few weeks using local treatment | |
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| Aphthous stomatitis | Local treatment is effective | |
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| Angioneurotic edema | Discontinue ACE inhibitor comedication | |
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| Creatine kinase (CK) elevation | May be related to everolimus overexposure or/and to comedication of statin therapy | Everolimus trough concentration should be adjusted to the lower margin of the target range for several days and/or statin therapy should be stopped temporarily. If this is not effective, consider a temporary switch from everolimus to MMF |
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| Increased proteinuria | May reflect physiological tubular proteinuria due to mTOR inhibition, which is reversible and without clinical relevance as it does not reflect damage to renal tissue | Concomitant prescription of ACE inhibitor or angiotensin-receptor blockers may reduce the incidence of new onset proteinuria |
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| Noninfectious pneumonia | More likely to occur during sirolimus treatment in cancer patients | Requiring dose reduction or discontinuation and anti-inflammatory treatment by high-dose steroids. Frequent radiologic assessment is mandatory and laboratory values should be monitored twice a week |
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| Impaired wound healing | Elevated risk early postoperatively in high-risk patients (e.g., diabetes, LVAD, redo surgery, and high-dose steroids) due to antiproliferative properties of mTOR inhibitors | Delayed onset of everolimus after transplant surgery, or temporary interruption during subsequent major surgery, may be helpful. In the event of minor local surgery in low-risk patients, everolimus therapy can be continued |
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| Pericardial/pleural effusion | Elevated incidence early after heart transplantation | Manageable by frequent monitoring with echocardiography/sonography, symptomatic diuretic treatment, and drainage on demand |
ACE: angiotensin converting enzyme; LVAD: left ventricular assist device; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil; mTOR: mammalian target-of-rapamycin inhibitor.