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A Randomized Trial of Everolimus and Low-dose Cyclosporine in Renal Transplantation: With or Without Steroids?
- Source :
-
Transplantation Proceedings . Dec2014, Vol. 46 Issue 10, p3375-3382. 8p. - Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- This multicenter, randomized, prospective, controlled trial (EVIDENCE study) aimed to determine short-term effects of early steroid withdrawal in renal transplant patients initially treated with everolimus, low-dose cyclosporine (CsA), and steroids. Patients were randomized to standard triple therapy with CsA, everolimus twice daily and steroids (group A), steroid-free immunosuppression (group B), or triple therapy once daily (group C). However, since patient enrollment was slower than expected, group C randomization was prematurely discontinued. The primary end point was treatment failure rate (composite end point of death, graft loss, biopsy-proven acute rejection, and loss to follow-up) between randomization and month 12. Patients evaluable for the primary end point included 139 randomized patients. According to intention-to-treat analysis, 2.8% of patients in group A and 14.7% in group B experienced treatment failure (95% upper confidence limit 19.7%). As this was higher than the predefined noninferiority limit of 10%, noninferiority could not be proved. No conclusive statements can be made on noninferiority of the steroid withdrawal regimen vs the standard regimen in these patients. Additional studies with longer follow-up are required to determine the efficacy of steroid-free immunosuppression in renal transplant recipients receiving everolimus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 00411345
- Volume :
- 46
- Issue :
- 10
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Transplantation Proceedings
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 99915770
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.transproceed.2014.05.087