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Incidence of Posttransplantation Diabetes Mellitus in De Novo Kidney Transplant Recipients Receiving Prolonged-Release Tacrolimus-Based Immunosuppression With 2 Different Corticosteroid Minimization Strategies: ADVANCE, A Randomized Controlled Trial.

Authors :
UCL - SSS/IREC/CHEX - Pôle de chirgurgie expérimentale et transplantation
UCL - (SLuc) Service de chirurgie et transplantation abdominale
Mourad, Georges
Glyda, Maciej
Albano, Laetitia
Viklický, Ondrej
Merville, Pierre
Tydén, Gunnar
Mourad, Michel
Lõhmus, Aleksander
Witzke, Oliver
Christiaans, Maarten H L
Brown, Malcolm W
Undre, Nasrullah
Kazeem, Gbenga
Kuypers, Dirk R J
Advagraf-based immunosuppression regimen examining new onset diabetes mellitus in kidney transplant recipients (ADVANCE) study
UCL - SSS/IREC/CHEX - Pôle de chirgurgie expérimentale et transplantation
UCL - (SLuc) Service de chirurgie et transplantation abdominale
Mourad, Georges
Glyda, Maciej
Albano, Laetitia
Viklický, Ondrej
Merville, Pierre
Tydén, Gunnar
Mourad, Michel
Lõhmus, Aleksander
Witzke, Oliver
Christiaans, Maarten H L
Brown, Malcolm W
Undre, Nasrullah
Kazeem, Gbenga
Kuypers, Dirk R J
Advagraf-based immunosuppression regimen examining new onset diabetes mellitus in kidney transplant recipients (ADVANCE) study
Source :
Transplantation, Vol. 101, no. 8, p. 1924-1934 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

BACKGROUND: ADVANCE (NCT01304836) was a phase 4, multicenter, prospectively randomized, open-label, 24-week study comparing the incidence of posttransplantation diabetes mellitus (PTDM) with 2 prolonged-release tacrolimus corticosteroid minimization regimens. METHODS: All patients received prolonged-release tacrolimus, basiliximab, mycophenolate mofetil and 1 bolus of intraoperative corticosteroids (0-1000 mg) as per center policy. Patients in arm 1 received tapered corticosteroids, stopped after day 10, whereas patients in arm 2 received no steroids after the intraoperative bolus. The primary efficacy variable was the diagnosis of PTDM as per American Diabetes Association criteria (2010) at any point up to 24 weeks postkidney transplantation. Secondary efficacy variables included incidence of composite efficacy failure (graft loss, biopsy-proven acute rejection or severe graft dysfunction: estimated glomerular filtration rate (Modification of Diet in Renal Disease-4) <30 mL/min per 1.73 m), acute rejection and graft and patient survival. RESULTS: The full-analysis set included 1081 patients (arm 1: n = 528, arm 2: n = 553). Baseline characteristics and mean tacrolimus trough levels were comparable between arms. Week 24 Kaplan-Meier estimates of PTDM were similar for arm 1 versus arm 2 (17.4% vs 16.6%; P = 0.579). Incidence of composite efficacy failure, graft and patient survival, and mean estimated glomerular filtration rate were also comparable between arms. Biopsy-proven acute rejection and acute rejection were significantly higher in arm 2 versus arm 1 (13.6% vs 8.7%, P = 0.006 and 25.9% vs 18.2%, P = 0.001, respectively). Tolerability profiles were comparable between arms. CONCLUSIONS: A prolonged-release tacrolimus, basiliximab, and mycophenolate mofetil immunosuppressive regimen is efficacious, with a low incidence of PTDM and a manageable tolerability profile over 24 weeks of treatment. A lower incidence of biopsy-proven acute rejection was seen in patients

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Transplantation, Vol. 101, no. 8, p. 1924-1934 (2017)
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1130459697
Document Type :
Electronic Resource