1. A randomized multicenter trial of OKT3 mAbs induction compared with intravenous cyclosporine in pediatric renal transplantation.
- Author
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Benfield MR, Tejani A, Harmon WE, McDonald R, Stablein DM, McIntosh M, and Rose S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Azathioprine therapeutic use, Child, Child, Preschool, Creatinine blood, Female, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Graft Survival immunology, Humans, Infant, Male, Mycophenolic Acid analogs & derivatives, Mycophenolic Acid therapeutic use, Prednisone therapeutic use, Transplantation, Homologous, Treatment Failure, Cyclosporine therapeutic use, Graft Rejection prevention & control, Immunosuppressive Agents therapeutic use, Kidney Transplantation immunology, Muromonab-CD3 therapeutic use
- Abstract
Acute rejection leading to renal graft failure is more frequent among children. In patients treated with T cell antibody induction, retrospective data from the pediatric registry show a 22% reduction in the risk of graft failure. We conducted a randomized trial (n = 287) using OKT3 mAbs in one (OKT3) arm and intravenous cyclosporine in the other arm (CYS). Maintenance therapy consisted of randomized, double blind Sandimmune or Neoral together with prednisone and either azathioprine (AZA) or mycophenolate mofetil (MMF). Morbidity, mortality, rejection rates and adverse reactions in the two study arms were similar. Through 4 yr, graft failure was 27% in OKT3 and 19% in CYS (p = 0.15). One-year graft survival was 89.1% in OKT3 and 89.2% in CYS (p = .19). In multivariate analysis, OKT3 had a numerically inferior graft survival (RR = 1.4, CI 0.8-2.2, p = 0.22). In OKT3 graft survival was inferior for children aged 6 yr or younger. Our trial demonstrates that the incidence of acute rejection or graft failure in pediatric patients is not improved by OKT3 induction therapy relative to cyclosporine induction.
- Published
- 2005
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