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IMPROVED GASTROINTESTINAL TOLERABILITY IN RENAL TRANSPLANT PATIENTS CONVERTED FROM LOW-DOSE MMF TO AN EQUIMOLAR DOSE OF ENTERIC-COATED MYCOPHENOLATE SODIUM.

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Presentation on theme: "IMPROVED GASTROINTESTINAL TOLERABILITY IN RENAL TRANSPLANT PATIENTS CONVERTED FROM LOW-DOSE MMF TO AN EQUIMOLAR DOSE OF ENTERIC-COATED MYCOPHENOLATE SODIUM."— Presentation transcript:

1 IMPROVED GASTROINTESTINAL TOLERABILITY IN RENAL TRANSPLANT PATIENTS CONVERTED FROM LOW-DOSE MMF TO AN EQUIMOLAR DOSE OF ENTERIC-COATED MYCOPHENOLATE SODIUM (MYFORTIC®) E. Minetti, MP. Scolari, ML. Perrino, S. Stefoni, S. Marchini, B. Giacon, P. Passerini, E. Sestigiani, D. Dissegna, G. Tisone and M. Salvadori for the CERL080AIT01 Study Group 7th New Trends in Immunosuppression Meeting Berlin, February 16-19, 2006

2 Increased risk of rejection2-3 & graft loss4
Background Although MMF has provided proven graft protection, up to 40% of patients experience distressing GI problems1 GI side effects are dose dependent1 , can be reduced by dose reduction/interruption/discontinuation subtherapeutic dosing Increased risk of rejection2-3 & graft loss4 Mycophenolic acid administered as mycophenolate mofetil (MMF, Cellcept®), is a widely used antiproliferative agent as part of combined immunosuppressive therapy following renal transplantation and offers both short-term (3, 4) and long-term (5, 6) efficacy benefits. However, the side-effect profile notably gastrointestinal (GI) complications (7), can limit its clinical benefits. These GI side effects which have a reported incidence of up to 40% are dose dependant and can lead to dose reduction or interruption increasing the risk of acute rejection or graft loss as reported in two retrospective analysis conducted by Pelletier and Knoll et al. 1. European MMF Cooperative Study Group. Lancet 1995; 345: 2. Pelletier RP. Am J Transplant 2002; S3: 467 3. Knoll GA et al. J Am Soc Nephrol 2003; 14: 2381 4. Hardinger KL et al. Transpl Int 2004; 17:

3 Aims of the MMF to EC-MPS conversion study
To assess: safety and efficacy of equimolar conversion from MMF (dose < 2 g/day) to EC-MPS the incidence and severity of GI adverse events before and after conversion the impact of gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms on GI-specific Quality of Life (QoL)

4 Evaluation criteria Serum creatinine, hematobiochemistry and vital signs Physicians’ assessment of presence/severity of GI symptoms (16-item check list) Patient reported outcomes: GI specific Quality of life (GIQLI) Visual-analog scale (100 mm) for upper and lower GI symptoms Picture of VAS

5 Study design Multicenter, open-label, longitudinal, single arm study.
Enrollment Equimolar Conversion End of study Observational Phase MMF Treatment Phase EC-MPS W W W W W16 GI check list X X X X X SCr, BP X X X X X GIQLI X X X VAS X X X X X This study was

6 Inclusion/exclusion criteria
Kidney transplant at least 6 months previously with: MMF dose < 2 g/day in combination with CsA Stable renal function and no acute rejection in the last two months Serum creatinine  2,5 mg/dl Absence of anemia or cytopenias

7 Patient Characteristics
No of patients Recipient age: year (SD) Male sex Time since tx: months (SD) 1st transplant Deceased donor CsA mean dose (mg/kg/day) 140 50.912.2 88 (63%) 53.243.3 127 (91%) 130 (93%) 2.60.85

8 MMF dose at conversion and reason for previous MMF dose reduction
Reasons for previous MMF dose reduction N° of patients MMF dose % of patients 5. Slide should describe inclusion and exclusion criteria mg/day Patients may have more than one reason for MMF dose reduction

9 Safety of conversion: hematobiochemistry and vital signs
MMF (W8) EC-MPS (W16) Serum creatinine (mg/dL) 1.56  0.44 1.57  0.42 Blood pressure: systolic diastolic 133.8  14.7 82.2  8.28 135.3  16.4 82.2  8.75 Hb (mg/dL) 13.0  1.73 13.0  1.88 WBC count (1012/L) 6.68  2.09 6.88  2.23 Platelet count (1012/L) 222.4  55.6 226.9  55.7

10 Percentage of patients with GI Symptoms according to check list
% Upper GI MMF W8 EC-MPS W16 p<0.05 Lower GI

11 GIQLI total Score before and after conversion
GIQLI total score (max score=144) NS p< 0,0022 Improvement 1) Eypasch E, et al (1995). Br J Surg; 82(2):

12 Presence and severity of GI-symptoms
None Mild Moderate/Severe 22.1% 20.3% 36.8% conversion 45.7% 32.2% 43.9% MMF W8 p<0.0001 EC-MPS W16

13 Mean Values of GI-Symptom VAS
mm MMF EC-MPS NS NS P<0.05 P<0.05 Improvement W0 W8 W16 W0 W8 W16

14 Conclusions The presence of GI complications in MMF treated patients and their impact on GI specific HRQoL seems to be underestimated Equimolar conversion from MMF to myfortic: is safe in maintenance renal transplant patients Decreases the frequency and severity of GI symptoms improves Patient Reported Outcomes (GIQLI and VAS) significantly

15 Participating centers
MILANO, Osp. Niguarda G. Civati, E. Minetti BOLOGNA, Pol. S. Orsola S. Stefoni, MP. Scolari PADOVA, Osp. Policlinico E. Ancona, P. Rigotti BOLZANO, Osp. Centrale W. Huber, B. Giacon MILANO, Osp. Policlinico PG. Messa, G. Montagnino BOLOGNA, Pol. S.Orsola A. Santoro SIENA, Pol. Le Scotte M. Carmellini, A. Bernini PALERMO, Osp. Civico V. Sparacino UDINE, Osp. S. Maria M. G. Mioni, D. Montanaro VICENZA, Osp. S. Maria Ronco, S. Chiaramonte ROMA, Osp. S. Eugenio G. Tisone FIRENZE, Pol. Careggi M. Salvadori

16 Possible questions and backup
Gastroprotection would protect upper GI but you showed a reduction of diarrhea also: how could you explain that?

17 Patient disposition MMF Myfortic No. enrolled Discontinued
Withdrew consent Adverse event Protocol violation Unsatisfactory therap. Effect Lost to follow-up Study phase completion MMF 162 22 7 2 10 1 140 Myfortic 6 - 134 4. slide should describe study design including all visits

18 Myfortic treatment discontinuation backup
Pat. 02/07 02/22 08/15 12/01 14/07 14/09 Age 53/M 50/M 54/F 57/M 53/F 71/F Dose 360 720 1080 Reason AE Adverse Event Anxiety, limbs formication Headache, erythema, meteorism Herpes Zoster Nausea, eructation, acid reflux GI symptom worsening Pre-existing bladder cancer

19 Other drug-related AE backup
Pat. 02/09 02/11 05/01 05/07 08/11 Age 43/F 65/F 49/F 59/M 52/F Type AE Inf. Event Headache, abdominal pain Leucopenia Abdominal distension Diarrhea Polioma virus, irritability Dose changes Dose reduction No change

20 GIQLI weighted subscales before and after conversion
MMF W8 EC-MPS W16 P<0.0001 NS NS NS NS

21 GI symptoms severity and QoL (GIQLI total score) after MMF and EC-MPS treatment
Bubble size indicate the % of pts in each category GIQLI MMF W8 EC-MPS W16 Deterioration Improvement none mild mod./ severe none mild mod./ severe Highest GI symptom severity

22 Study rationale The standard dose of MMF after renal transplantation is 2 g/day Many patients suffer from GI adverse events, so the dose of MMF needs to be reduced or withdrawn1 The new formulation of sodium mycophenolate (EC-MPS, myfortic®) has been shown to be effective and safe in de novo and also in maintenance patients converted from MMF to EC-MPS on equimolar basis 2,3 1) Knoll GA et al (2003). J Am Soc Nephrol; 2) Budde K et al. (2004). Am J Transplant; 3) Salvadori M et al. (2004). Am J Transplant;


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