4 results on '"Mayes JT"'
Search Results
2. Independent effects of cyclosporine and prednisone on posttransplant hypercholesterolemia.
- Author
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Hricik DE, Mayes JT, and Schulak JA
- Subjects
- Adult, Azathioprine administration & dosage, Cholesterol blood, Cyclosporins administration & dosage, Drug Therapy, Combination, Female, Humans, Hypercholesterolemia blood, Hypercholesterolemia chemically induced, Male, Middle Aged, Prednisone administration & dosage, Cyclosporins adverse effects, Hypercholesterolemia etiology, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Prednisone adverse effects
- Abstract
To clarify the relative influences of cyclosporine (CsA) therapy, corticosteroid therapy, and other clinical variables on posttransplant hypercholesterolemia, total serum cholesterol levels were measured in 107 renal transplant recipients receiving one of three immunosuppression regimens: CsA and azathioprine (AZA) (group I); CsA, AZA, and prednisone (group II); or AZA and prednisone (group III). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that prednisone therapy, CsA therapy, patient age, and pretransplant cholesterol levels correlated independently with posttransplant cholesterol levels at last follow-up (ranging from 13 to 84 months after transplantation). In 32 patients successfully withdrawn from corticosteroid therapy and maintained on AZA and stable doses of CsA, serum cholesterol decreased from 6.55 +/- 1.1 mmol/L (253.5 +/- 43.1 mg/dL) to 5.27 +/- 1.2 mmol/L (203.9 +/- 45.6 mg/dL). Results of this analysis indicate that prednisone and CsA are independent factors in the pathogenesis of posttransplant hypercholesterolemia. Complete withdrawal of corticosteroids partially corrects hypercholesterolemia in CsA-treated renal transplant recipients.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Complications and monitoring of OKT3 therapy.
- Author
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Thistlethwaite JR Jr, Stuart JK, Mayes JT, Gaber AO, Woodle S, Buckingham MR, and Stuart FP
- Subjects
- Adult, Antibodies, Anti-Idiotypic analysis, Antibodies, Monoclonal immunology, Child, Graft Rejection, Humans, Immunoglobulin G analysis, Immunoglobulin M analysis, Immunosuppression Therapy methods, Kidney Transplantation, Meningitis, Aseptic epidemiology, Meningitis, Aseptic etiology, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Seizures epidemiology, Seizures etiology, Time Factors, Antibodies, Monoclonal adverse effects, Monitoring, Physiologic
- Abstract
Complications of OKT3 therapy were studied in 122 treatment episodes in renal allograft recipients (83 for rejection treatment, 39 for immunosuppression induction). A febrile first-dose reaction to OKT3 was common; no severe pulmonary complications were encountered. Other toxicities of OKT3 therapy were observed later in the treatment course. Most severe were the occurrence of aseptic meningitis in four patients (3%), and seizures in eight (6%). Seizures occurred only when OKT3 was given to patients with nonfunctioning grafts due to acute tubular necrosis. Infections were the only significant late adverse sequelae of OKT3 therapy and occurred more frequently after multiple exposures to the drug (53%) than after a single exposure (22%). IgG antibodies to OKT3 developed after 45% of exposures to the drug in the 74 patients in whom appearance of anti-OKT3 antibodies was monitored. In two patients (3%), anti-OKT3 antibodies were detected before the end of the OKT3 treatment course, neutralizing the immunosuppressive property of the drug. In five patients (7%), strong anti-OKT3 antibody responses were present at the time of subsequent rejection, which precluded reuse of the drug. In 17 other cases, no or only a weak anti-OKT3 response was detectable at the time of rejection following initial OKT3 exposure. Retreatment with OKT3 was successful in reversing rejection in 15 cases (88%). No untoward sequelae were noted after reexposure to OKT3, except the high incidence of subsequent infections.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Use of a brief steroid trial before initiating OKT3 therapy for renal allograft rejection.
- Author
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Thistlethwaite JR Jr, Stuart JK, Mayes JT, Gaber AO, and Stuart FP
- Subjects
- Cyclosporins administration & dosage, Drug Evaluation, Female, Graft Survival drug effects, Humans, Immunosuppression Therapy methods, Male, Time Factors, Transplantation, Homologous, Antibodies, Monoclonal therapeutic use, Graft Rejection drug effects, Kidney Transplantation, Methylprednisolone therapeutic use
- Abstract
OKT3 (Ortho Pharmaceutical, Raritan, NJ) has been employed in a protocol where all patients received cyclosporine as part of their baseline immunosuppressive regimen and, after the diagnosis of rejection was established, were treated with up to three pulses of methylprednisolone before monoclonal antibody therapy was initiated. Use of this protocol has allowed 46% of rejection episodes encountered to be treated on an outpatient basis without resorting to inpatient use of OKT3, but has avoided delaying OKT3 therapy until after all other methods of rejection treatment were found to be ineffective. Of 83 rejection episodes treated with OKT3 between March 1985 and May 1987, 78 (94%) were reversed. Overall graft survival is 84% and patient survival is 96% in OKT3-treated patients. Of the 17 rejection episodes where OKT3 treatment was a second or third exposure to the drug, rejection was successfully reversed in 15 (88%). In cadaver donor allograft recipients transplanted between March 1985 and May 1986, actual 1-year graft survival is 80% for 30 patients requiring no rejection therapy, 80% for 20 patients with rejection episodes responding quickly to steroids, and 82% for 28 patients with OKT3-treated, steroid-insensitive rejections. Mean serum creatinine at 1 year posttransplant is 1.5 +/- 0.5; 1.9 +/- 0.7; and 2.1 +/- 0.8, respectively, for these groups of patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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