Factors associated with long-term renal allograft survival

Major advances in immunosuppression and reductions in the rates of acute rejection have led to increasing graft and patient survival rates during the past two decades. Chronic dysfunction of the renal allograft, however, remains a major clinical problem and probably represents the end result of the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Therapeutic drug monitoring 2002-02, Vol.24 (1), p.36-39
Hauptverfasser: KAPLAN, Bruce, SRINIVAS, Titte R, MEIER-KRIESCHE, Herwig-Ulf
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container_title Therapeutic drug monitoring
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creator KAPLAN, Bruce
SRINIVAS, Titte R
MEIER-KRIESCHE, Herwig-Ulf
description Major advances in immunosuppression and reductions in the rates of acute rejection have led to increasing graft and patient survival rates during the past two decades. Chronic dysfunction of the renal allograft, however, remains a major clinical problem and probably represents the end result of the complex interplay between donor and recipient factors, immunologic injury, nonimmunologic insults, and drug-induced nephrotoxicity. Optimal function of the renal allograft is obtained by maintaining a balance between underimmunosuppression and acute rejection and overimmunosuppression and drug-induced toxicities. To minimize side effects while maintaining efficacy, immunosuppressive drugs are commonly used as combination therapy. Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic interactions between these agents can affect graft survival and function. The evidence supporting the role of therapeutic drug monitoring as applied to commonly used immunosuppressants in modern transplantation is presented here, and the increasing role of therapeutic drug monitoring in the optimization of graft and patient survival rates in the modern era of renal transplantation is discussed.
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subjects Biological and medical sciences
Drug Monitoring
Graft Rejection - drug therapy
Graft Rejection - immunology
Graft Survival - drug effects
Graft Survival - immunology
Graft Survival - physiology
Humans
Immunomodulators
Immunosuppressive Agents - pharmacokinetics
Immunosuppressive Agents - therapeutic use
Kidney Transplantation - immunology
Kidney Transplantation - physiology
Medical sciences
Pharmacology. Drug treatments
Tissue Donors
Transplantation, Homologous
title Factors associated with long-term renal allograft survival
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