Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4256600 Transplantation Proceedings 2014 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Proliferation signal inhibitors, such as everolimus, offer immunosuppression without the toxicity of calcineurin inhibitors. This descriptive and prospective study reports outcomes at 1 year and predictors of improved estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) in 174 renal transplant recipients from a national registry of the use of everolimus. At 1 year after conversion, 48.85% of patients had improved eGFR compared with baseline. The mean time from transplantation to initiation of treatment with everolimus was 47.97 months, the median 22 (range, 0–312) months. The kidneys were from deceased donors in 120 patients (68.79%) and from living donors in 54 (31.21%); 35 (20.83%) were expanded-criteria donors. When comparing the baseline versus 12-month values of laboratory results, total cholesterol levels and platelet counts differed significantly—191.55 ± 43.92 mg/dL versus 204.52 ± 41.29 mg/dL (P < .05) and 213,411 ± 63,231/mm3 vs 255,571 ± 59,153/mm3, respectively (P < .05)—but remained within clinically controllable ranges. Glycemia, triglycerides, hematocrit, hemoglobin, and leukocytes remained stable. Logistic regression analysis of baseline variables showed that the only independent prognostic factor for improved eGFR at 1 year was the conversion of patients to everolimus within the first 12 months after transplantation (odds ratio, 2.17; 95% confidence interval, 1.15–4.10). In conclusion, regarding the effectiveness of everolimus in our subjects, the only predictor of improved eGFR identified at 1 year was conversion within 12 months after transplantation.

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