Reduction of cyclosporine following the introduction of everolimus in maintenance heart transplant recipients: a pilot study

Heather Ross, Peter Pflugfelder, Haissam Haddad, Marcelo Cantarovich, Michael White, Andrew Ignaszewski, Jonathan Howlett, Marc Vaillancourt, Richard Dorent, Jeffrey R Burton, CADENCE Study Group (CAnadian Pilot Sutdy to Determine Safe and Effective Dosing of Neoral and CErtican in Stable Cardiac Transplant Recipients), Heather Ross, Peter Pflugfelder, Haissam Haddad, Marcelo Cantarovich, Michael White, Andrew Ignaszewski, Jonathan Howlett, Marc Vaillancourt, Richard Dorent, Jeffrey R Burton, CADENCE Study Group (CAnadian Pilot Sutdy to Determine Safe and Effective Dosing of Neoral and CErtican in Stable Cardiac Transplant Recipients)

Abstract

Data are scarce concerning the calcineurin inhibitor dose reduction required following introduction of everolimus in maintenance heart transplant recipients to maintain stable renal function. In a 48-week, multicenter, single-arm pilot study in heart transplant patients >12 months post-transplant, everolimus was started at 1.5 mg/day (subsequently adjusted to target C(0) 5-10 ng/ml). Mycophenolate mofetil or azathioprine was discontinued on the same day and cyclosporine (CsA) dose was reduced by 25%, with a further 25% reduction each time calculated glomerular filtration rate (cGFR) decreased to <75% of baseline. Of 36 patients enrolled, 25 were receiving everolimus at week 48. From baseline to week 48, there was a mean decrease of 44.5%, 50.9% and 44.6% in CsA dose, C(0) and C(2), respectively. Mean cGFR was 68.9 +/- 14.5 ml/min at baseline and 61.6 +/- 11.5 ml/min at week 48 (P = 0.018). The prespecified criterion for stable renal function was met, i.e. a mean decrease <or=25% of cGFR from baseline. Two patients experienced biopsy-proven acute rejection Grade 3A (5.6%). Between baseline and week 48, there were significant increases in total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol and triglycerides, and small but significant elevations in liver enzymes. This 1-year pilot study suggests that CsA dose reduction of ca. 40% after initiation of everolimus was associated with a decrease in cGFR, however, based on the prespecified criteria stable renal function was attained.

Source: PubMed

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