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Published bySilas Stevens Modified over 9 years ago
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CNI toxicity and mTOR inhibitors or the old switcheroo
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Case 1: MV 51F ESRF Li nephrotoxicity uP:Cr 151 late 07 BG depression, hypertension PD 6/12 LR renal allograft Apr 09
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Transplantation 4/6 mismatch CMV+ donor, CMV- recipient 1500mL blood loss Induction: Basiliximab Tacrolimus Mycophenolate
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@ 3 months Cr 110 Tac3/2 (level 8), MMF 750 bd, Pred 10 NODAT on gliclazide MR Hypertension BP148/91 on lercanidipine Mild leucopaenia PTH 35 uP:Cr 100
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Bump along the way Cr 99 to 132 = Biopsy: ATN, mild interstitial fibrosis, tubular atrophy C4d, BK negative No rejection/CNI tox ACEI (normal doppler) and ↑ Ca but… Switch to sirolimus
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Case 2: SD 49M ESRF IgA disease 1 year CAPD Cardiomyopathy Cadaveric heart and kidney transplant 93
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Progress Recurrent IgA 01 Proteinuria 300mg daily Dyslipidaemia Statin induced myositis, atorvastatin ok Gout SCC +++ including face Hernia repair
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State of play Cr 120 Good LV function uP:Cr 12 CsA 50 bd, MMF 750/500, pred 5 Biopsy…
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Biopsy Prominent arteriolar hyaline thickening Mild tubular atrophy “Favours cyclosporine toxicity” C4d, BK negative Switch to everolimus
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Immunosuppression biology Calcineurin inhibitors CNI toxicity mTOR inhibitors Switching
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Acute cellular rejection
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C4d staining
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Immunosuppression effects Suppress rejection Undesired immunodeficiency Infection Cancer Non-immune toxicity
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Calcineurin inhibitors Cyclosporin Tacrolimus
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Cyclosporine side effects Hypertension Hyperlipidaemia Gum hypertrophy Hirsutism Tremor NODAT Nephrotoxicity HUS
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Tacrolimus side effects NODAT Tremor Hypertension Hyperlipidaemia Cosmetic changes Nephrotoxicity HUS
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CNI toxicity Acute Vasoconstriction ATN Chronic Arteriolar hyalinosis Striped fibrosis Tubular vacuolisation
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CNI vasculopathy
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“striped fibrosis”
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CNI tubulopathy
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Inhibitors of mTOR Sirolimus Everolimus
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Sirolimus (Rapamune) SIDE EFFECTS Hyperlipidaemia Thrombocytopaenia Anaemia Diarrhoea Impaired wound healing Lymphocoele Proteinuria Mouth ulcers Oedema Acne Pneumonitis BENEFITS Antineoplastic Arterial protection May reduce CMV No CNI toxicity
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Sirolimus usage Renal transplantation With CNI CNI-free or CNI-sparing regimen Switching from CNI Non-renal uses Transplant: heart, lung, liver, islet cell GVHD prophylaxis (HSCT) Drug eluting stents Thrombotic microangiopathy Oncology (temsirolimus)
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Everolimus (Certican) Derivative of sirolimus Very similar profile
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Switching The CONVERT trial (Transplantation Jan 09) >800 patients >6/12 post transplant On CsA or Tac Continue 1 : 2 Convert Primary endpoints GFR BCAR Graft loss Death
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Outcomes: safe and effective BENEFITS Equivalent: GFR (ITT) BCAR Patient survival Graft survival Malignancy decreased Total (3.8 v 11%) Skin (2.2 v 7.7%) NEGATIVES Proteinuria Infection Pneumonia (12.7 v 5.1%) HSV (8.7 v 4.4%) Anaemia (36.3 v 16.5%) Thrombocytopaenia
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Conclusion If you are going to switch, do it early GFR >40 No proteinuria Benefits in terms of renal function are small
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Switching for CNI toxicity Two trials this year (n=137) Biopsy proven chronic CNI toxicity Switched to SRL+MMF+pred (no loading) Outcomes: Best for GFR>40, mild CNI toxicity 90% graft survival but many adverse events
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The hidden cost DrugAnnual cost ($) Prednegligible MMF (500 bd)3,000 CsA (200mg daily)4,750 Tac (4mg daily)6,000 SRL (3mg daily)8,400 Ritux (4 doses)13,500
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Summary Inhibitors of mTOR are safe, effective Valid alternative for CNI toxicity Outside this group renal benefits small: Non-renal benefits may be persuasive Go early if you go at all Vigilant for side effects
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