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Effect of initial immunosuppression on long-term kidney transplant outcome in immunological low-risk patients.

Authors :
Michielsen, Laura A
Zuilen, Arjan D van
Verhaar, Marianne C
Wisse, Bram W
Kamburova, Elena G
Joosten, Irma
Allebes, Wil A
van der Meer, Arnold
Baas, Marije C
Spierings, Eric
Hack, Cornelis E
Reekum, Franka E van
Bots, Michiel L
Drop, Adriaan C A D
Plaisier, Loes
Seelen, Marc A J
Sanders, Jan-Stephan F
Hepkema, Bouke G
Lambeck, Annechien J
Bungener, Laura B
Source :
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation; Aug2019, Vol. 34 Issue 8, p1417-1422, 6p, 1 Diagram, 2 Charts, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background Few studies have evaluated the effect of different immunosuppressive strategies on long-term kidney transplant outcomes. Moreover, as they were usually based on historical data, it was not possible to account for the presence of pretransplant donor-specific human-leukocyte antigen antibodies (DSA), a currently recognized risk marker for impaired graft survival. The aim of this study was to evaluate to what extent frequently used initial immunosuppressive therapies increase graft survival in immunological low-risk patients. Methods We performed an analysis on the PROCARE cohort, a Dutch multicentre study including all transplantations performed in the Netherlands between 1995 and 2005 with available pretransplant serum (n  = 4724). All sera were assessed for the presence of DSA by a luminex single-antigen bead assay. Patients with a previous kidney transplantation, pretransplant DSA or receiving induction therapy were excluded from the analysis. Results Three regimes were used in over 200 patients: cyclosporine (CsA)/prednisolone (Pred) (n  = 542), CsA/mycophenolate mofetil (MMF)/Pred (n  = 857) and tacrolimus (TAC)/MMF/Pred (n  = 811). Covariate-adjusted analysis revealed no significant differences in 10-year death-censored graft survival between patients on TAC/MMF/Pred therapy (79%) compared with patients on CsA/MMF/Pred (82%, P = 0.88) or CsA/Pred (79%, P = 0.21). However, 1-year rejection-free survival censored for death and failure unrelated to rejection was significantly higher for TAC/MMF/Pred (81%) when compared with CsA/MMF/Pred (67%, P <   0.0001) and CsA/Pred (64%, P <   0.0001). Conclusion These results suggest that in immunological low-risk patients excellent long-term kidney graft survival can be achieved irrespective of the type of initial immunosuppressive therapy (CsA or TAC; with or without MMF), despite differences in 1-year rejection-free survival. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Subjects

Subjects :
KIDNEY transplantation

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09310509
Volume :
34
Issue :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137912056
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ndt/gfy377