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A three-arm study comparing immediate tacrolimus therapy with antithymocyte globulin induction therapy followed by tacrolimus or cyclosporine A in adult renal transplant recipients1

Authors :
Michel Olmer
Gérard Rifle
Yvon Lebranchu
Denis Glotz
P. Vialtel
Daniel Abramowicz
Jean-Paul Squifflet
Jean-pierre Wauters
Lionel Rostaing
Patrick Le Pogamp
Olivier Toupance
Pierre Merville
Bruno Moulin
Christophe Legendre
Philippe Wolf
Claire Pouteil-Noble
Raj Purgus
Michel Leski
Georges Mourad
Giovanni Civati
André Pruna
Bernard Bourbigot
Guy Touchard
Philippe Lang
François Berthoux
Michèle Kessler
Elisabeth Cassuto
Jean-Louis Touraine
Bernard Charpentier
Bruno Hurault de Ligny
Françoise Mignon
Source :
Transplantation. 75:844-851
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2003.

Abstract

Background. Induction therapy with antithymocyte globulin (ATG) reduces the incidence of acute rejection after transplantation. A study was undertaken to assess the efficacy and safety of ATG induction on tacrolimus-based and cyclosporine A (CsA)-based therapies compared with immediate tacrolimus triple therapy in kidney transplant recipients. Methods. In a 6-month, open-label, randomized, prospective study conducted in 30 European centers, 555 renal transplant patients were randomly assigned to tacrolimus triple therapy (Tac triple, n=185), ATG induction with tacrolimus (ATG-Tac, n= 186), or ATG induction with CsA microemulsion (ATG-CsA, n=184); all were combined with azathioprine, and corticosteroids. The primary endpoint was incidence and time to first acute rejection episode confirmed by biopsy. Results. Patient demographics and clinical parameters at baseline were similar. Patient and graft survival rates were similar in all groups. The incidence of clinically apparent acute rejection was significantly higher (P=0.003) for Tac triple (33.0%) compared with ATG-Tac (22.6%) and the incidence for ATG-Tac was significantly lower (P=0.004) than for ATG-CsA (37.0%). The incidences of acute rejection confirmed by biopsy (primary endpoint) were 25.4%, 15.1%, and 21.2% for Tac triple, ATG-Tac, and ATG-CsA, respectively (Tac triple vs. ATG-Tac, P=0.004). The incidences of corticosteroid-resistant acute rejection were 7.0% (Tac triple), 4.8% (ATG-Tac), and 10.9% (ATG-CsA) (ATG-Tac vs. ATG-CsA, P=0.038). In the ATG groups, the incidences of leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, serum sickness, fever, and cytomegalovirus infection were significantly higher (P

Details

ISSN :
00411337
Volume :
75
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b32ddb8ab5246d76673fd1d566b186fe
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/01.tp.0000056635.59888.ef