| Literature DB >> 25703346 |
Christoph Schwarz1, Sophie Mayerhoffer1, Gabriela A Berlakovich1, Rudolf Steininger1, Thomas Soliman1, Bruno Watschinger2, Georg A Böhmig2, Farsad Eskandary2, Franz König3, Ferdinand Mühlbacher1, Thomas Wekerle1.
Abstract
While belatacept has shown favorable short- and midterm results in kidney transplant recipients, only projections exist regarding its potential impact on long-term outcome. Therefore, we performed a retrospective case-match analysis of the 14 belatacept patients originally enrolled in the phase II multicenter trial at our center. Fifty six cyclosporine (CyA)-treated patients were matched according to age at transplantation, first/retransplant, and donor type. Ten years after kidney transplantation, kidney function remained superior in belatacept-treated patients compared with the CyA control group. Moreover, none of the belatacept-treated patients had donor-specific antibodies ≥10 years post-transplantation compared with 38.5% of tested CyA-treated subject (0/10 vs. 5/13; P = 0.045). Notably, however, patient and graft survival was virtually identical in both groups (71.4% vs. 71.3%; P = 0.976). In the present single-center study population, patients treated with belatacept demonstrated a patient and graft survival at 10 years post-transplant which was comparable to that of similarly selected CNI-treated patients. Larger studies with sufficient statistical power are necessary to definitively determine long-term graft survival with belatacept.Entities:
Keywords: belatacept; immunosuppression; kidney transplantation; long-term outcome
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25703346 DOI: 10.1111/tri.12544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transpl Int ISSN: 0934-0874 Impact factor: 3.782