| Literature DB >> 24719752 |
Goran B Klintmalm1, Björn Nashan2.
Abstract
Despite the success of liver transplantation, long-term complications remain, including de novo malignancies, metabolic syndrome, and the recurrence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The current mainstay of treatment, calcineurin inhibitors (CNIs), can also worsen posttransplant renal dysfunction, neurotoxicity, and diabetes. Clearly there is a need for better immunosuppressive agents that maintain similar rates of efficacy and renal function whilst minimizing adverse effects. The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitors with a mechanism of action that is different from other immunosuppressive agents has the potential to address some of these issues. In this review we surveyed the literature for reports of the use of mTOR inhibitors in adult liver transplantation with respect to renal function, efficacy, safety, neurological symptoms, de novo tumors, and the recurrence of HCC and HCV. The results of our review indicate that mTOR inhibitors are associated with efficacy comparable to CNIs while having benefits on renal function in liver transplantation. We also consider newer dosing schedules that may limit side effects. Finally, we discuss evidence that mTOR inhibitors may have benefits in the oncology setting and in relation to HCV-related allograft fibrosis, metabolic syndrome, and neurotoxicity.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24719752 PMCID: PMC3955586 DOI: 10.1155/2014/845438
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transplant ISSN: 2090-0007
Figure 1Sites of action of immunosuppressive drugs (adapted from [33] with permission).
Effect of mTOR inhibitors on components of metabolic syndrome.
| NODM (% recipients) | Hypertension | Lipid levels | Weight gain | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sirolimus | ||||
|
| ||||
| Maintenance dosing | ||||
| Kazimi et al. | 32 versus 10 (SRL versus CNI, | |||
|
| ||||
|
| ||||
| Chinnakotla et al. | 12.26 versus 0 (TAC versus SRL, | |||
| Levy et al. | Hypercholesterolemia: 3.3, 7.1, 10.0, 9.7 | |||
| Dunkelberg et al. | 26 versus 30 (SRL versus SRL-free, | Obesity (BMI > 28): 20 versus 31 (SRL versus SRL-free, | ||
|
| ||||
| Early conversion (≤3 months after conversion) | ||||
| Rogers et al. | Hypertriglyceridemia (>200 mg/dL): 22 versus 15 (SRL versus CNI, | |||
| Schleicher et al. | Hyperlipidemia: 42 | |||
|
| ||||
| Late conversion (>3 months after conversion) | ||||
| Herlenius et al. | Hypertriglyceridemia: 58.3 versus 16.7 (SRL versus MMF, | |||
| Lam et al. | Increase in serum cholesterol: 30.5 ( | |||
| Shenoy et al. | Hyperlipidemia requiring treatment: 15 (SRL and CNI) | |||
| Uhlmann et al. | In 12 hypertensive patients who converted to SRL: systolic BP decreased from 151.5 ± 20.2 mmHg to 132.1 ± 19.4 mmHg, and diastolic BP decreased from 89.7 ± 11.2 mmHg to 82.1 ± 9.1 mmHg | |||
| Morard et al. | Incidence of diabetes did not change after conversion (32 versus 30, before versus after conversion) | Incidence of hypertension did not change after conversion (70 versus 74, before versus after conversion) | Hypercholesterolemia: 49 ( | |
| Watson et al. | Hypertension treatment increased: 15.4 versus 21.4 (SRL versus CNI, | Statin treatment required: 35.7 versus 0 (SRL versus CNI) | Weight gain: 7.7 versus 0 (SRL versus CNI, | |
| Vivarelli. | Hyperlipidemia: 51.1 | |||
| Abdelmalek et al. | Hyperlipidemia: 41 versus 10 (SRL versus CNI, | |||
| Di Benedetto et al. | Hypertriglyceridemia: 35.4 | |||
| McKenna et al. | Median weight 2 years: 75.3 versus 84.1 (SRL versus non-SRL, | |||
|
| ||||
| Everolimus | ||||
|
| ||||
| Early conversion (≤3 months after conversion) | ||||
| De Simone et al. | Incidence of NODM in non-diabetics at randomization in EVR + TAC-RD: 32.0% ( | 17.1 versus 15.8 (EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD, RR 1.09, 95% CI 0.73, 1.62) | Total cholesterol: mean (SD) values at month 12 (EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD): | |
| Fischer et al. | Diabetes mellitus: 4.0 versus 7.8 (EVR versus CNI, | Hypertension: 19.8 versus 13.7 (EVR versus CNI, | Hypercholesterolemia: 22.8 versus 10.8* | |
| Masetti et al. | Significantly higher cholesterol levels in EVR versus CsA: 9.6 versus 7.7 required statin treatment (EVR versus CsA) | |||
|
| ||||
| Late conversion (>3 months after conversion) | ||||
| Bilbao et al. Presented at ILTS; 2011 (Abstract P-68) [ | 7/18 recipients who had diabetes mellitus at conversion to EVR showed improvement | |||
| Casanovas et al. | Dyslipidemia: 27.3 | |||
| Castroagudín et al. | Before and after conversion: | |||
| De Simone et al. | Hyperlipemia: 42.5 | |||
| De Simone et al. | Hypercholesterolemia: 13.9 versus 2.7 ( | |||
| Vallin et al. | Incidence of diabetes did not significantly vary after EVR introduction (before versus after: 30 versus 31) | Incidence of arterial hypertension did not significantly vary after EVR introduction (before versus after: 59 versus 53) | Hyperlipidemia: 37 | |
| Saliba et al. | Hypertriglyceridemia: 14.6 | |||
BMI: body mass index; CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; EVR: everolimus; ILTS: 2011 Joint International Congress of the International Liver Transplantation Society; NODM: new-onset diabetes mellitus; NS: nonsignificant; SD: standard deviation; SRL: sirolimus; TAC: tacrolimus; TAC-RD: reduced-dose tacrolimus (C0: 3–5 ng/mL); TAC-SD: standard-dose tacrolimus (C0: 6–10 ng/mL).
P values are included where available.
*Treatment group differences with an exploratory P value ≤ 0.05.
The effects of sirolimus in liver transplant recipients with concomitant hepatocellular carcinoma.
| Overall survival rate at 1 year after transplant (%) | Overall survival rate at 2 years after transplant (%) | Overall survival rate at 3 years after transplant (%) | Overall survival rate at 4 years after transplant (%) | Overall survival rate at 5 years after transplant (%) | Mortality risk ratio (SRL : CNI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maintenance dosing | ||||||
| Toso et al. | 85.6 versus 79.2 (SRL versus SRL-free) | 83.1 versus 68.7 (SRL versus SRL-free, | ||||
| Kneteman et al. | 94.1 (Milan criteria) 90.5 (extended criteria) | 81.1 (Milan criteria), 76.8 (extended criteria) | ||||
|
| ||||||
|
| ||||||
| Chinnakotla et al. | 94 versus 79 (SRL versus TAC) | 85 versus 66 (SRL versus TAC) | 80 versus 59 (SRL versus TAC, | |||
| Zhou et al. | 90.67 versus 61.60 (SRL versus TAC, | 80.59 versus 53.90 (SRL versus TAC, | ||||
| Zimmerman et al. | 95.5 versus 83 (SRL versus CNI) | 78.8 versus 62 (SRL versus CNI) | 0.672 ( | |||
|
| ||||||
| Late conversion (>3 months after transplantation) | ||||||
| Vivarelli et al. | 84 | |||||
P values are included where available.
CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; NS: nonsignificant; SRL: sirolimus; TAC: tacrolimus.
Effects of mTOR inhibitors on hepatitis C virus and fibrosis progression in hepatitis C virus liver transplant recipients.
| Patient survival | Graft survival | Fibrosis | HCV recurrence rate | Other | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sirolimus | |||||
|
| |||||
| Maintenance dosing | |||||
| Wagner et al. | 95% survival in whole group; lower survival in SRL versus CNI according to log rank test ( | Viral load (×106): 6.9 versus 21.3 (SRL versus CNI, | |||
|
| |||||
|
| |||||
| McKenna et al. | 1 year after transplant: patient survival: 92.5% versus 87.9% (SRL versus control, | Fibrosis state ≥2, | Mean HCV RNA, 1 year after transplant: 9.16 × 106 versus 6.90 × 106 (SRL versus control, | ||
| Asthana et al. | Change in mean fibrosis score: +1.1 versus −0.52 (CNI versus SRL, | HCV recurrence: 75% versus 69.8% (SRL versus controls, | |||
| Asthana et al. Presented at AASLD 2011 (Abstract 184) [ | SVR: 60%, 43%, 29% (SRL versus TAC versus CsA) | ||||
|
| |||||
| Late conversion (>3 months after transplantation) | |||||
| Stein et al. Presented at the American Transplant Congress 2011 (Abstract 817) [ | 1-, 3- and 5-year allograft survival probability (%): 100, 92, 78 (SRL) and 100, 95, 90 (TAC), log rank −0.6, respectively | 1- and 3-year fibrosis and activity scores: | |||
|
| |||||
| Everolimus | |||||
|
| |||||
|
| |||||
| Dopazo et al. Presented at ILTS; 2011 (Abstract P-460) [ | Fibrosis stages I and II–IV, respectively: 8% and 30% (EVR), and 5% and 36% (control group) ( | ||||
|
| |||||
| Maintenance dosing | |||||
| Grazi et al. Presented at ILTS; 2011 (Abstract P-256) [ | HCV recurrence rate: 54% versus 33% (EVR versus TAC, | ||||
|
| |||||
| Early conversion (≤3 months after transplantation) | |||||
| Masetti et al. | HCV recurrence rate: 65% versus 75% (EVR versus CsA, | ||||
P values are included where available.
AASLD: The Liver Meeting 62nd Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases; EVR: everolimus; HCV: hepatitis C virus; ILTS: 2011 Joint International Congress of the International Liver Transplantation Society; NS: nonsignificant; SRL: sirolimus; SVR: sustained virologic response; TAC: tacrolimus.
Other properties of mTOR inhibitors.
| mTOR inhibitor | Effect of mTOR inhibitors on | |
|---|---|---|
| EVR | Bilbao et al. | Six recipients with |
| EVR | Fischer et al. | Neoplasms: benign, malignant and unspecified (including cysts and polyps): 4.0% versus 8.8% (EVR versus CNI, |
| SRL | Jiménez-Romero et al. | 11 of 16 recipients who developed |
| SRL | Vivarelli. | 3 of 4 recipients with |
|
| ||
| mTOR inhibitor | Effect of mTOR inhibitors on neurological symptoms | |
|
| ||
| EVR | Bilbao et al. | 3/3 cases of neurotoxicity resolved |
| EVR | Masetti et al. | Minor neurological complications: EVR: 3/52 (5.8%), CsA: 5/26 (19.2%) ( |
| SRL | Forgacs et al. | 7/7 recipients showed improvement or resolution of neurological symptoms |
| SRL |
Maramattom and Wijdicks | No neurotoxicity in 52 recipients treated with SRL from 2001–04 |
| SRL | Morard et al. | Severe CNI-associated neurological symptoms improved in 6/6 recipients who converted from CNI |
| SRL | Vivarelli. | Complete resolution of neurological symptoms in 14/16 recipients who converted from CNI |
P values are included where available.
CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; CsA: cyclosporine A; EVR: everolimus; HCV: hepatitis C virus; IS: immunosuppression; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil; SRL: sirolimus; TAC: tacrolimus.
(a)
| Participants | Study designa | Duration of study | Sirolimus dosing | Strength of study design based on defined criteriab | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Chinnakotla et al. |
| R/P | 5 years | 2 mg orally, once daily. Levels maintained at 5–8 ng/mL for the first 3 months and at 5 ng/mL thereafter | High |
| Asthana et al. |
| R | 12 months | Maintained at 8–12 ng/mL | Medium |
| McKenna et al. |
| R/P | 2 years | 2 mg daily without a loading dose beginning on the first postoperative day | Medium |
| Wagner et al. |
| P, C | 12 months | Trough levels were maintained between 3 and 8 ng/mL | Medium |
| Zhou et al. |
| R | 2 years | Given 1 month after transplant: initial dose of 3 mg/m2 adjusted over time to achieve steady-state trough levels of | Medium |
| Asthana et al. Presented at AASLD 2011 (Abstract 184) [ |
| P, C | Median of 77.6 months | Not stated | Low |
| Campsen et al. |
| R | 1 year | Not stated | Low |
| Dunkelberg et al. |
| R | 12 months | 6 mg on day 0, and 2 mg/day thereafter no target level was specified | Low |
| Jiménez-Romero et al. |
| P, S | Mean of 15.7 months | Loading dose: 4 mg, followed by 2 mg/day until 8–12 days, thereafter dose adjusted to achieve target blood level of 5–10 ng/mL | Low |
| Kneteman et al. |
| P, S | 4 years | Adjusted to achieve target levels of 12–20 ng/mL | Low |
|
Maramattom and Wijdicks |
| R | 18 months | Loading dose: 6 mg, thereafter: 1–10 mg/day with target blood level of 8–15 ng/mL | Low |
| Molinari et al. |
| R | 5 years | Oral dose adjusted to keep the blood levels in the range of 10–15 ng/mL during the first 3–6 months and then in the range of 5–10 ng/mL afterwards | Low |
| Toso et al. |
| R | 5 years | Not stated | Low |
| Wiesner et al. |
| P, Ra | 6 months | Fixed-dose of 5 mg/day | Low |
| Zimmerman et al. |
| R | 5 years | Bolus dose of 6 mg on day 0 and given on 2 mg/day thereafter | Low |
|
| |||||
| Combination of | |||||
| Kazimi et al. |
| R | 1111 ± 800 days | Not stated | Low |
(b)
| Participants | Study designa | Duration of study | Sirolimus dosing | Strength of study design based on criteriab | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early conversion (≤3 months after transplantation) | |||||
| Rogers et al. |
| R | 12 months | Target SRL levels for the first three months after conversion were 8–10 ng/dL, 6–8 ng/dL for months 3–6, and 5–6 ng/dL after month 12 | High |
| Harper et al. |
| R | Median of 1006 days | Conversion from CNI to SRL performed with an overlap. SRL given at 2 mg/day and CNI withdrawn when SRL reached 5–8 ng/mL | Medium |
| McKenna et al. |
| R | 10 years | Not stated | Medium |
| Schleicher et al. |
| R | 12 months | Initial dose of 10 mg/day. Doses were adjusted successively to maintain trough levels of 5–10 ng/mL | Medium |
| Sanchez et al. |
| P, C | 2 years | In recipients with HCC or autoimmune disorders, SRL doses used were typically either a 5 mg or 3 mg loading dose followed by 2 mg each day | Medium |
| Forgacs et al. |
| R | Up to 425 days | Not stated | Low |
|
| |||||
| Late conversion (>3 months after transplantation) | |||||
| Campbell et al |
| R | Median of 359 days | 2 mg daily, dose adjusted until target levels of 5–8 ng/mL achieved | High |
| DuBay et al. |
| R | 12 months | Recipients on CNI monotherapy were started on SRL 1 mg/day and the CNI dose was halved. At 1 week, the CNI was stopped, and the SRL dose was adjusted on the basis of the serum levels. For recipients on combination therapy, the CNI was stopped, and SRL was started on the same day at 2 mg/day while the antimetabolite or steroid doses were maintained at their current levels. In both groups the SRL dose was adjusted to maintain trough levels of 5–15 | High |
| Herlenius et al. |
| P, Ra | 12 months | A single bolus dose of 10 mg SRL followed by three consecutive daily doses of 8 mg. Target trough concentration of 10 ng/mL | Medium |
| Lam et al. |
| P, S | Mean of 328 ± 57 days | SRL initiated at 2 mg/day. Doses adjusted to achieve target level of 4–10 ng/mL | Medium |
| Morard et al. |
| R | Median of 22.6 ± 11 months | Loading dose: 6 mg (day 1) followed by 2 mg/day (day 2–7). SRL dose adjusted to maintain trough levels of 5–10 ng/mL | Medium |
| Shenoy et al |
| P, Ra | 12 months | 5 mg loading dose, followed by 3 mg SRL once daily. Levels maintained 6–10 ng/mL | Medium |
| Uhlmann et al. |
| P, S | 75.6 months | SRL started at 1 mg/day, dose adjusted to maintain trough levels at 69 ng/mL | Medium |
| Watson et al. |
| P, Ra | 12 months | CNI was discontinued the evening before conversion, and recipients were started on 2 mg/day SRL on the following day. Target range of 5–15 ng/mL | Medium |
| Stein et al. Presented at the American Transplant Congress 2011 (Abstract 817) [ |
| R | 5 years | Not stated | Low |
| Vivarelli et al. |
| R | 510 ± 366 days | 5 mg/m2 for 1st day, then 2 mg/daily, adjusted to trough blood level <10 ng/mL | Low |
| Di Benedetto et al |
| R | Mean of 27.5 months (range: 2–71.2 months) | SRL at a loading dose of 0.1 mg/kg on day 1 of the switch, then 0.05 mg/kg for the next few days. Dose adjusted to maintain trough levels of 8–10 ng/mL | Low |
| Abdelmalek et al |
| P, Ra | Up to 6 years | Loading dose of SRL: 10–15 mg. First dose given ≥4 h after the last CNI dose; second doses given 12 h later. On study days 2–6, SRL doses of 3–5 mg/day were given. Thereafter, SRL doses maintained to achieve blood levels of 6–16 ng/mL (chromatographic) and subsequently to 8–16 ng/mL (chromatographic) or 10–20 ng/mL (immunoassay) | Low |
| Bäckman et al. |
| P, S | 6 months | Loading dose of 15 mg SRL on days 1 and 2, then 8 mg/day and adjusted to achieve trough levels of 13–22 and 10–22 ng/mL | Low |
| Fairbanks et al |
| P, S | Mean of 66.8 ± 38.9 weeks | Initially 1-2 mg/day and increased weekly by 1 mg to achieve therapeutic levels (9–12 ng/mL) | Low |
| Nair et al |
| R | 6 months | Loading dose of 5 mg on day 1, followed by 2 mg/day. A trough level of 5–10 ng/mL was maintained | Low |
| Neff et al |
| R | 90 days | Mean starting dose of SRL (10 mg/day) adjusted to maintain trough levels of 8–12 ng/mL during first month and subsequently 3–5 ng/mL for recipients on maintenance combination therapy with SRL | Low |
| Wadei et al |
| R | Median of 3.1 years | CNI dose reduced by 50% until target SRL level of 8–12 ng/mL achieved | Low |
Search terms were ‘‘sirolimus liver transplantation” OR ‘‘sirolimus liver transplant.”
CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; HCC: hepatocellular carcinoma; HCV: hepatitis C virus; ILTS: 2011 Joint International Congress of the International Liver Transplantation Society; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil; SRL: sirolimus; TAC: tacrolimus.
aStudy design: C: cohort; P: prospective; R: retrospective; Ra: randomized; S: single-arm.
bSee Section 2 for description of how criteria are defined.
(c)
| Participants | Study designa | Study duration | Everolimus dosing | Strength of study design based on criteriab | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| De Simone et al. |
| P, Ra | 12 months | For EVR + TAC-WD, EVR initiated at a dose of 1.0 mg b.i.d. within 24 h of randomization with the dose adjusted from day 5 onward, to maintain | High |
| Grazi et al. Presented at ILTS; 2011 (Abstract P-256) [ |
| P, Ra | 1 year | Not stated | Low |
| Levy et al. Liver Transpl. 2006; 12: 1640–8 [ |
| P, Ra | 36 months | 1, 2 or 4 mg/day | Low |
Search terms were ‘‘everolimus liver transplantation” OR ‘‘everolimus liver transplant.”
Maintenance therapy refers to immunotherapy for the lifetime of the graft. Conversion therapy is where liver transplant recipients were withdrawn from CNIs and switched to everolimus.
Bmab: basiliximab; CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; EVR: everolimus; HCV: hepatitis C virus; SRL: sirolimus; TAC: tacrolimus.
aStudy design: P: prospective; R: retrospective; Ra: randomized.
bSee Section 2 for description of how criteria are defined.
(d)
| Participants | Study designa | Study duration | Everolimus dosing | Strength of study design based on criteriab | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early conversion (≤3 months after transplantation) | |||||
| De Simone et al |
| P, Ra | 12 months | For EVR + TAC-WD, EVR initiated at a dose of 1.0 mg b.i.d. within 24 h of randomization with the dose adjusted from day 5 onward, to maintain | High |
| Fischer et al |
| P, Ra | 12 months | EVR started at 1.5 mg b.i.d. and adjusted to achieve a target trough level of 5–12 ng/mL (8–12 ng/mL in patients on treatment with CsA), when CNI was tapered by 70% of the initial CNI dose | High |
| Masetti et al |
| P, Ra | 12 months | Initial dose: 2.0 mg/day, trough level of 6–10 ng/mL. When CsA discontinued, trough level: 8–12 ng/mL until end of month 6 and 6–10 ng/mL thereafter | High |
| Saliba et al. AASLD 2012 [ |
| P, Ra | 24 months | Same as De Simone et al. | High |
| Schlitt et al. AASLD 2012 [ |
| P, Ra | 35 months | Same as Fischer et al. | High |
|
| |||||
| Late conversion (>3 months after transplantation) | |||||
| Bilbao et al |
| R | Mean of 10 ± 9 months | In refractory rejection: initial dose 0.5 mg/12 h. Trough levels 5 ng/mL. For CNI-related adverse events, EVR started at 0.5 mg once or twice a day. For malignancy, EVR introduced at 0.5 mg/day, adjusting trough levels to <3 ng/mL | Medium |
| Casanovas et al |
| P, S | Mean of 134 months | Initial dose 0.25 mg/12 h for the first 4 days. Target trough 3–5 ng/mL | Medium |
| Castroagudín et al. |
| P, S | Median of 19.8 months | 0.75 mg b.i.d., with target trough levels of 3–8 ng/mL | Medium |
| De Simone et al |
| P, S | 12 months | EVR 1.5 mg/day. Trough level of 3–8 ng/mL | Medium |
| De Simone et al |
| P, Ra | 12 months | Initial: 3 mg/day ×2 on day 1. After week 2: EVR trough level maintained at 3–8 ng/mL during concomitant CNI administration and 6–12 ng/mL if CNI eliminated | Medium |
| Bilbao et al. Presented at ILTS; 2011 (Abstract P-68) [ |
| R | Median of 12 months | EVR trough level at ~3 ng/mL | Low |
| Saliba et al |
| R | 12 months | Introduced at mean 2.4 mg/day. The mean trough level = 7.3 ng/mL at month 1 and 8.1 ng/mL at month 12 across total population, with higher values in monotherapy cohort (8.8 ng/mL at month 12) | Low |
| Vallin et al |
| R | Mean of 12 ± 7 months | Initial dose 0.75–1.5 mg b.i.d. Trough adjusted to 3–8 ng/mL | Low |
P values are included where available.
Search terms were ‘‘everolimus liver transplantation” OR ‘‘everolimus liver transplant.”
AASLD: Annual Meetings of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases; b.i.d.: twice daily; CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; CsA: cyclosporin A; EVR: everolimus; ILTS: 2011 Joint International Congress of the International Liver Transplantation Society; TAC: tacrolimus; TAC-RD: reduced-dose tacrolimus; TAC-SD: standard-dose tacrolimus; TAC-WD: tacrolimus withdrawn.
aStudy design: P: prospective; R: retrospective; Ra: randomized; S: single-arm.
bSee Section 2 for description of how criteria are defined.
(a)
| Patient survival rate (%) | Graft rejection rate (%) | Acute rejection rate (%) | BPAR (%) | Acute cellular rejection rate | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 months | 1 year | Crude mortality rate/1000 person-months | Crude graft failure rate/1000 person-months | 1 year | (%) | ACR/1000 person-months | Steroid-resistant rejection/1000 person-months | |||
|
| ||||||||||
| Sanchez et al | 17.2 | |||||||||
| Molinari et al | 95 versus 94 (SRL versus CNI) | 92 versus 91 (SRL versus CNI) | 0 versus 0 (SRL versus CNI) | 32.5 versus 44.1 (SRL versus CNI, | 46.7 versus 58.9 (SRL versus CNI, | |||||
| Campsen et al | 2.39 (group 1), 1.96 and 3.88 (SRL conversion groups 2 and 3), 1.82 and 2.13 (SRL | 2.68 (group 1), 2.15 and 3.88 (SRL conversion groups 2 and 3), 1.82 and 2.13 (SRL | 12.5 (group 1), 13.4, 12.9 (SRL conversion groups 2, 3, | 3.48 (group 1), 4.29, 3.88 (SRL conversion groups 2, 3, | ||||||
|
| ||||||||||
| Late conversion (>3 months after transplantation) | ||||||||||
|
DuBay et al. | 5 versus 4 (SRL versus control) | |||||||||
| Shenoy et al. | 5 versus 5 (SRL versus control) | |||||||||
| Watson et al. | 7.7 versus 0 (SRL versus CNI) | |||||||||
| Abdelmalek et al. | 93.4 versus 94.4 (SRL versus CNI) | 0 versus 0 (SRL versus CNI) | 6.4 versus 1.9 (SRL versus CNI) | 11.7 versus 6.1 (SRL versus CNI, | ||||||
| Bäckman et al. | 6.7 | |||||||||
| Di Benedetto et al. | 12.9 | |||||||||
| Fairbanks et al. | 4.8 | |||||||||
| Nair et al | 0 | |||||||||
|
| ||||||||||
| Conversion times compared | ||||||||||
| Rogers et al | 35, 38, 43 (early, late conversion SRL and CNI) | |||||||||
|
| ||||||||||
| Variable conversion times | ||||||||||
| Harper et al | 3.4 | |||||||||
| Sanchez et al. | 2.8 | |||||||||
P values are included where available.
ACR: acute cellular rejection; BPAR: biopsy-proven acute rejection; CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; NS: nonsignificant; SRL: sirolimus.
*Key to groups:
(1) CNI + MPS at time of discharge.
(2) CNI + MPS at time of discharge; SRL added within the first 6 months and continued through the first year.
(3) CNI + MPS at time of discharge; SRL was added within the first 6 months and discontinued before the first year.
(4) SRL as primary immunosuppression.
(5) SRL as primary immunosuppression and discontinued before the first year.
(b)
| Patient survival rate (%) | Graft rejection rate (%) | Acute rejection rate (%) | BPAR (%) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 months | 1 year | Other time points | 6 months | 1 year | 3 years | 6 months | 1 year | Other time points | ||
|
| ||||||||||
| De Simone et al. | 96.3 versus 97.5 (EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD, | 2.4 versus 1.2 (EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD, | 4.1 versus 10.7 (EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD, | |||||||
| Grazi et al. Presented at ILTS; 2011 (Abstract P-256) [ | ||||||||||
| Levy et al. | 82.1, 96.7, 87.1 for EVR 1, 2 and 4 mg/day∗† | 0, 13.3 and 3.2 for EVR 1, 2 and 4 mg/day∗† | 39.3, 30.0 and 29.0 for EVR 1, 2 and 4 mg/day∗† | 32.1, 26.7, and 25.8 for EVR 1, 2 and, 4 mg/day∗† | 39.3, 30.0, and 29.0 for EVR 1, 2, and 4 mg/day∗† at 3 years | |||||
|
| ||||||||||
| Early conversion (≤3 months after transplantation) | ||||||||||
| Fischer et al. | 95.8 versus 95.9 (EVR versus CNI control at 11 months, | 2.1 versus 2.0 (EVR versus CNI control at 11 months) | 17.7 versus 15.3 (EVR versus CNI control at 11 months) | |||||||
| Schlitt et al. AASLD 2012 [ | 95.7 versus 90.0 (EVR versus CNI control at 35 months, | 24.4 versus 15.8 (EVR versus CNI control at 35 months, | ||||||||
| Masetti et al. | 92.3 versus 92.3 (EVR versus CsA, | 90.4 versus 88.5 (EVR versus CsA, | 5.7 at 40–87 days after transplant versus 7.7 at days 41–240 after transplant CsA ( | |||||||
| De Simone et al. | 96.5 versus 96.3 versus 97.5 (TAC elim versus EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD) | 2.2 versus 2.4 versus 1.2 (TAC elim versus EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD) | 19.9 versus 4.1 versus 10.7 (TAC elim versus EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD) | |||||||
| Saliba et al. AASLD 2012 [ | 6.1 versus 13.3; delta risk: −7.2% (95% CI: −13.5%, −0.9%; | |||||||||
|
| ||||||||||
| Late conversion (>3 months after transplantation) | ||||||||||
| Casanovas et al. | 94.3 | |||||||||
| Castroagudín et al. | 0 | |||||||||
| De Simone et al. | 100 | 0 | 15 | |||||||
| De Simone et al. | 98.6 versus 100 (EVR versus CNI) | 95.8 versus 95.9 (EVR versus CNI) | 0 versus 0 (EVR versus CNI) | 1.4 versus 1.4 (EVR versus CNI) | 4.2 versus 4.1 (EVR versus CNI) | |||||
| Saliba et al. | 1.6 | |||||||||
| Vallin et al. | 9 | |||||||||
P values are included where available; *P: not significant for all efficacy-related events versus placebo; otherwise, where not stated.
†Timepoint refers to time after immunosuppression was initiated.
AASLD: The Liver Meeting 62nd Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases; BPAR: biopsy-proven acute rejection; CsA: cyclosporin A; CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; EVR: everolimus; NS: nonsignificant; TAC elim; tacrolimus elimination; TAC-RD: reduced dose tacrolimus (C0: 3–5 ng/mL); TAC-SD: standard-dose tacrolimus (C0: 6–10 ng/mL).
(a)
| mTOR inhibitor | Change in GFR (mL/min/1.73 m2) after conversion | Change in serum creatinine concentration (mg/dL) after conversion | Change in CrCl (mL/min) from baseline at postconversion time point | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 months | 6 months | 1 year | 2 years | 5 years | 6 months | 1 year | 6 months | 1 year | ||
| Levy et al. | EVR | EVR: 1, 2, and 4 mg/day versus placebo: −18.7, −36.5, and −33.2 versus −37 | EVR: 1, 2, and 4 mg/day versus placebo: −20.2, −43.0, and −36.9 versus −36.9 | |||||||
| Chinnakotla et al | SRL | −46.5 versus −41.0 (SRL versus TAC) | −39.5 versus −30.0 (SRL versus TAC) | −43.5 versus −31.5 (SRL versus TAC) | −38.5 versus −37.0 (SRL versus TAC) | |||||
| Campsen et al | SRL | −2.85 versus −9.66 (CNI versus SRL, | −6.29 versus −13.32 (CNI versus SRL, | |||||||
| Zimmerman et al | SRL | −0.22 versus +0.61 (SRL versus CNIs, | −0.28 versus +0.35 (SRL versus CNIs, | |||||||
P values are included where available.
CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; CrCl: creatinine clearance; EVR: everolimus; GFR: glomerular filtration rate; mTOR: mammalian target of rapamycin; SRL: sirolimus; TAC: tacrolimus.
(b)
| Change in GFR (mL/min/1.73 m2) after conversion | Change in serum creatinine concentration (µm/L) after conversion | Change in 24 h CrCl (mL/min) after conversion | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 mo | 6 mo | 1 year | 2 years | 3 years | 1 mo | 3 mo | 6 mo | 1 year | 2 years | 3 years | 3 mo | 1 year | |
| Early conversion (≤3 months after transplantation) | |||||||||||||
| McKenna et al | |||||||||||||
| Rogers et al | +29.7 versus +18.5 (early versus late conversion, | +28.7 versus +12.4 (early versus late conversion, | +25.5 versus +14.7 (early versus late conversion, | ||||||||||
| Harper et al. | +10.6 versus baseline ( | ||||||||||||
| Schleicher et al. | +15 versus +9 (early versus late conversion, | +16 versus +10 (early versus late conversion, | +22† versus +12† (early versus late conversion, | −0.7‡ (early conversion versus baseline, | |||||||||
|
| |||||||||||||
| Late conversion (>3 months after transplantation) | |||||||||||||
| Campbell et al. | 0‡ (SRL versus CNI) | ||||||||||||
| Di Benedetto et al | |||||||||||||
| DuBay et al | |||||||||||||
| Herlenius et al. | +12 versus baseline ( | ||||||||||||
| Lam et al | −0.32‡ versus baseline ( | +0.12‡, versus baseline ( | |||||||||||
| Sanchez et al | +8.2, | +20.2, NS versus case control | +16.1, NS versus case control | −0.1 | 0 | 0 | |||||||
| Shenoy et al. | +12 versus −4, NS versus CNI | ||||||||||||
| Uhlmann et al | +11.9 versus baseline ( | −27 versus baseline ( | |||||||||||
| Watson et al. | +7.7 versus baseline ( | +6.1 versus baseline ( | |||||||||||
| Abdelmalek et al. | −4.45 versus −3.07 (SRL versus CNI, | ||||||||||||
| Bäckman et al | +6.4 ( | ||||||||||||
| Fairbanks et al | +9* versus baseline | ||||||||||||
| Nair et al | −0.45‡ versus baseline ( | ||||||||||||
| Neff et al | +11.3 versus baseline | ||||||||||||
| Vivarelli et al. | +18 versus baseline† | +19 versus baseline† | +19 versus baseline† | ||||||||||
| Wadei et al | +3.5† versus baseline ( | −0.1 versus baseline ( | |||||||||||
P values are included where available.
*Median eGFR, mean of 67 weeks; †mL/min; ‡mg/dL.
CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; CrCl: creatinine clearance; GFR: glomerular filtration rate; mo: month; NS: nonsignificant; SRL: sirolimus.
(c)
| Change in GFR (mL/min/1.73 m2) after conversion | Change in serum creatinine concentration (µmol/L) after conversion | Change in CrCl (mL/min) from baseline at postconversion time point | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 months | 1 year | Other time points | 3 months | 6 months | 1 year | 6 months | 1 year | |
| Early conversion (≤3 months after transplantation) | ||||||||
| Fischer et al | 11-month data (EVR versus CNI): | |||||||
| Schlitt et al. AASLD 2012 [ | 35 months: difference in eGFR between EVR and CNI: Cockcroft-Gault: −10.5 mL/min ( | |||||||
| Masetti et al | +6.1 versus −16.5 (EVR versus CsA, | +5.9 versus −14.8 (EVR versus CsA, | ||||||
| De Simone et al | EVR + TAC-RD (adjusted mean difference in eGFR change for EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD: +8.50 ± 2.12; | |||||||
| Saliba et al. AASLD 2012 [ | 24 months: | |||||||
|
| ||||||||
| Late conversion (>3 months after transplantation) | ||||||||
| Castroagudín et al | +3.99 (NS versus baseline) | +7.65 ( | −0.09 (NS versus baseline) | −0.22‡ ( | +5.18 (NS versus baseline) | +9.82 ( | ||
| De Simone et al | +4.03 | |||||||
| De Simone et al | EVR: +1.0; controls: +2.3 (NS) | |||||||
| Saliba et al. | +6.6 chronic renal failure subpopulation versus baseline ( | +4.2 overall versus baseline ( | −11 versus baseline ( | −9 versus baseline ( | −6 versus baseline ( | |||
P values are included where available.
*Median eGFR; †mL/min; ‡mg/dL.
§Between-group difference (calculated as CNI group minus everolimus group) at month 11 after baseline; results based on ANCOVA model.
CG-GFR: GFR calculated with the Cockcroft-Gault formula; CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; CrCl: creatinine clearance; CsA: cyclosporin A; EVR: everolimus; GFR: glomerular filtration rate; LS: least square; MDRD: modification of diet in renal disease; MDRD-GFR: GFR calculated using the MDRD formula; NS: nonsignificant; SE: standard error; TAC-RD: reduced-dose tacrolimus (C0: 3–5 ng/mL); TAC-SD: standard-dose tacrolimus (C0: 6–10 ng/mL).
(d)
| Proteinuria (after conversion unless otherwise stated), % recipients | |
|---|---|
| Sirolimus studies | |
|
| |
| Early conversion (≤3 months after transplantation) | |
| Harper et al | Proteinuria: preconversion: 45; 6 months: 72; 3 years: 63; 5 years: 58 |
|
| |
| Late conversion (>3 months after transplantation) | |
| DuBay et al | 7 versus 4 (SRL versus CNI) |
| Herlenius et al | 8.3 versus 7.7 (SRL versus MMF) |
| Morard et al | Albuminuria: 36 |
| Uhlmann et al | Proteinuria increased at 6 months after conversion ( |
| Wadei et al | 81 |
|
| |
| Everolimus studies | |
|
| |
| Early conversion (≤3 months after transplantation) | |
| De Simone et al | EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD: 2.9 versus 0.4 (RR: 6.89, 95% CI 0.85, 55.54) |
| Fischer et al. | EVR versus CNI: 9.9 versus 2.0 |
|
| |
| Late conversion (>3 months after transplantation) | |
| Castroagudín et al | 38.1 |
| Saliba et al | 5.4 |
| Vallin et al | 13 versus 29 (pre- versus after conversion, |
P values are included where available.
CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; EVR: everolimus; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil; SRL: sirolimus; RR: relative risk; 95% CI: 95% confidence interval; TAC: tacrolimus; TAC-RD: reduced-dose tacrolimus (C0: 3–5 ng/mL); TAC-SD: standard-dose tacrolimus (C0: 6–10 ng/mL).
(a)
| mTOR inhibitor | HAT (%) | Portal vein thrombosis (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Levy et al. | EVR | Placebo: 3.3, EVR 1, 2, and 4 mg/day: 0, 3.3, and 3.2, respectively | |
| Chinnakotla et al. | SRL | 1.65 versus 0 (SRL versus TAC, | 1.65 versus 0.94 (SRL versus TAC, |
| Molinari et al. | SRL | 1.2 versus 5.8 (SRL versus CNI, | 0.8 versus 1.8 (SRL versus CNI, |
| Dunkelberg et al. | SRL | Hepatic artery complications: 5.3 versus 8.3 (SRL versus controls, | |
| Wiesner et al. | SRL | 8.1 versus 3.8 and 9.0 versus 3.8 (SRL + CsA + CS versus TAC + CS, 2 and 6 months after transplant, | |
| Zimmerman et al. | SRL | 2.2 versus 1.9 (SRL versus CNI) | 0 versus 0 |
|
| |||
| Early conversion (≤3 months after conversion) | |||
| De Simone et al. | EVR | 0.4 versus 0.4 compared to 1.9 in all patients during the prerandomization run-in phase (EVR + TAC-RD versus EVR + TAC-WD) | |
| Masetti et al. | EVR | Hepatic artery stenosis/thrombosis: 1.9 versus 15.4 (EVR versus CsA, | |
| McKenna et al. | SRL | 1.2 versus 5.6 (SRL versus SRL-free, | |
| Rogers et al. | SRL | 7 versus 11 (SRL versus CNI, | 0 versus 8 ( |
| Schleicher et al. Transplant Proc. 2010; 42: 2572–5 [ | SRL | 0 | |
|
| |||
| Late conversion (>3 months after conversion) | |||
| Abdelmalek et al. | SRL | 0.25 versus 0 (SRL versus CNI, | |
P values are included where available.
CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; CsA: cyclosporine A; EVR: everolimus; HAT: hepatic artery thrombosis; NS: nonsignificant; SRL: sirolimus; TAC: tacrolimus; TAC-RD: reduced-dose tacrolimus (C0: 3–5 ng/mL); TAC-WD: tacrolimus withdrawn.
(b)
| Edema (% recipients) | Wound complications (% recipients) | Ulcers (% recipients) | Bile duct complications (% recipients) | Infections (% recipients) | Dermatological effects (% recipients) | Hematological effects (% recipients) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||
| Chinnakotla et al. | Wound dehiscence: 3.31 versus 1.89 (SRL versus TAC, | ||||||
| McKenna et al. | CMV: 13.3 versus 20.2 (SRL versus controls, | ||||||
| Sanchez et al. | Wound infection: 13.8 | Bacterial infection: 34.5 versus 22.9 | Leukopenia: 6.9 versus 25.7 ( | ||||
| Molinari et al. | Wound complications: 15 versus 11.6 (SRL versus CNI, | 19.4 versus 18.5 (SRL versus CNI, | Opportunistic infections: 18.5 versus 13 | ||||
| Dunkelberg et al. | Wound complications: 12.4 versus 13.9 (SRL versus controls, | ||||||
| Zimmerman et al. | Wound infection: 2.2 versus 3.8 (SRL versus CNI) | ||||||
|
| |||||||
| Early conversion (≤3 months after transplantation) | |||||||
| Rogers et al. | Incisional hernia: 14 versus 15 (SRL versus CNI, | Oral ulcers: 15 versus 3 (SRL versus CNI, | CMV disease: 13 versus 6 (SRL versus CNI, | Facial rash: 8 versus 5 (SRL versus CNI, | Leukopenia: 20 versus 12 (SRL versus CNI, | ||
| Harper et al. | Peripheral edema: 21 | Mouth ulcer: 15 | Pneumonitis: 5 | Rash: 7 | Anemia: 11 | ||
| Schleicher et al. | Incisional hernia: 7 | Leukopenia: 12 | |||||
|
| |||||||
| Late conversion (>3 months after transplantation) | |||||||
| Campbell et al. | Leg edema: 5 | ||||||
| DuBay et al. | Lower extremity edema: 23 versus 11 (SRL versus CNI, | Anemia: 16 versus 12 (SRL versus CNI, | |||||
| Watson et al. | Edema: 30.8 versus 7.1 (SRL versus CNI) | Slow wound healing: 7.7 versus 0 (SRL versus CNI) | Oral ulcers: 38 | Rash: 69 versus 0 (SRL versus CNI) | Thrombocytopenia: 23 versus 14.3 (SRL versus CNI) | ||
| Herlenius et al. | Oral ulcers: 42 versus 0 (SRL versus MMF, | Infectious episode: 33.3 versus 38.5 (SRL versus MMF, | |||||
| Morard et al. | Ankle edema: 14 | Oral ulcer: 12 | Infection: 2 | Dermatitis: 14 | |||
| Shenoy et al. | Mouth sores: 25 versus 0 (SRL versus CNI) | ||||||
| Uhlmann et al. | Oral ulcer: 16 | ||||||
| Fairbanks et al. | Oral ulcer: 9.5 | Rash: 9.5 | Anemia: 23.8 | ||||
| Di Benedetto et al. | Thrombocytopenia (leading to withdrawal): 12.9 | ||||||
| Abdelmalek et al. | Peripheral edema: 33 versus 14 (SRL versus CNI, | Oral ulcer: 11 versus 1 (SRL versus CNI, | Herpes simpex: 9 versus 1 (SRL versus CNI, | 29 versus 8 (SRL versus CNI, | |||
| Vivarelli et al. | Lower limb edema: 23.3 | Oral ulcer: 5.8 | Rash: 5.8 | Anemia: 13.9 | |||
P values are included where available.
CMV: cytomegalovirus; CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil; NS: non-significant; SRL: sirolimus; TAC: tacrolimus.
(c)
| Edema (% recipients) | Wound complications (% recipients) | Ulcers (% recipients) | Bile duct complications (% recipients) | Infections (% recipients) | Dermatological effects (% recipients) | Hematological effects (% recipients) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||
| Levy et al. | CMV disease: 3.3, 3.6, 6.7, and 9.7 (placebo versus EVR 1, 2, and 4 mg/day, respectively, | Thrombocytopenia: 10.0, 14.3, 20.0, and 19.4 | |||||
|
| |||||||
| Early conversion (≤3 months after transplantation) | |||||||
| De Simone et al. | 17.6 versus 10.8 (EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD, RR 1.63, 95% CI 1.03, 2.56) | Wound complications: 11.0 versus 7.9 (EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD, RR 1.40, 95% CI 0.80, 2.45) | Leukopenia: 11.8 versus 5.0 (EVR + TAC-RD versus TAC-SD, RR 2.38, 95% CI 1.24, 4.55) | ||||
| Fischer et al. | Wound complications: 2 versus 3.9 | Infections and infestations: 73.3 versus 59.8 (EVR versus CNI) | Anemia: 18.8 versus 10.8 | ||||
| Masetti et al. | Inferior limb edema: 9.6 versus 0 (EVR versus CsA, | Incisional hernia: 46.1 versus 26.9 (EVR versus CsA, | Biliary complications (stenosis/leak): 21.1 versus 30.8 (EVR versus CsA, | Infections: 46.1 versus 46.1 (EVR versus CsA, | |||
|
| |||||||
| Late conversion (>3 months after transplantation) | |||||||
| Bilbao et al. | Mucositis: 4 | Sepsis in the context of graft-versus-host disease: 4 | |||||
| Casanovas et al. | Anemia, leukopenia, and thrombocytopenia: 11.4 | ||||||
| De Simone et al. | Oral ulcers/stomatitis: 22.5 | Lower urinary tract infection: 5 | Pruritis and acne: 7.5 | ||||
| De Simone et al. | Mouth ulcers: 26.4 versus 0.0 (EVR versus SNI, | Infections: 31.9 versus 21.9, of which 15.3 versus 1.4 were suspected to be drug-related (EVR versus CNI) | Rash/dry skin/eczema: 6.9 versus 0.0 (EVR versus CNI, | Leukopenia: 12.5 versus 5.5 | |||
| Saliba et al. | Edema: 16.3 | Stomatitis/mouth ulcers: 14.2 | Bacterial infection: 12.5 | Rash: 18.8 | Anemia: 12.9 | ||
| Vallin et al. | Edema: 7 | Mucositis: 15 | Infection: 3 | Dermatitis: 19 | |||
CMV: cytomegalovirus; CNI: calcineurin inhibitor; CsA: cyclosporine A; EVR: everolimus; NS: nonsignificant; SRL: sirolimus; RR: relative risk; 95% CI: 95% confidence interval; TAC: tacrolimus; TAC-RD: reduced-dose tacrolimus (C0: 3–5 ng/mL); TAC-SD: standard-dose tacrolimus (C0: 6–10 ng/mL).
P values are included where available *Treatment group differences with an exploratory P value of P ≤ 0.05.