Impact of 3 Major Maintenance Immunosuppressive Protocols on Long-term Clinical Outcomes: Result of a Large Multicenter Italian Cohort Study Including 5635 Renal Transplant Recipients

Although optimization of immunosuppressive schemes in renal transplantation have minimized acute posttransplant complications, long-term outcomes are still not optimal and most of the chronic graft damage is drug-related. Therefore, to define the best long-term maintenance immunosuppressive regimen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transplantation proceedings 2019-01, Vol.51 (1), p.136-139
Hauptverfasser: Caletti, C., Manuel Ferraro, P., Corvo, A., Tessari, G., Sandrini, S., Capelli, I., Minetti, E., Gesualdo, L., Girolomoni, G., Boschiero, L., Lupo, A., Zaza, G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although optimization of immunosuppressive schemes in renal transplantation have minimized acute posttransplant complications, long-term outcomes are still not optimal and most of the chronic graft damage is drug-related. Therefore, to define the best long-term maintenance immunosuppressive regimen is of major importance in renal transplantation. To assess this objective, we undertook a large, multicenter cohort study in Italy. We retrospectively analyzed data of 5635 patients (enrolled from 1983 to 2012) and we assessed the impact of 3 major immunosuppressive regimens (calcineurin inhibitors+antimetabolites+corticosteroids [CNI+ANT+CS] vs CNI+mammalian target-of-rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitors+CS [CNI+mTOR-I+CS] vs CNI+CS) on long-term clinical outcomes by employing several statistical algorithms. The overall difference in the incidence of outcome over time was not statistically different within the first 5 years of follow-up (P = .13); however, it became significant at 10 years and 20 years (P < .01), with the CNI+CS group showing the lowest cumulative incidence of outcome. Compared with the CNI+ANT+CS group, the CNI+mTOR-I+CS group patients had a significantly higher risk of outcome (hazard ratio [HR], 1.30; P = .024); the difference remained significant and even increased in magnitude after adjustment for potential confounders (HR, 1.38; P = .006). Similarly, patients in the CNI+CS group had a significantly higher risk of the outcome (HR, 1.64; P < .001). Our data confirm that CNI+ANT+CS is the “gold standard” therapy in renal transplantation, but, whenever required, the introduction of mTOR-Is instead of ANT may not dramatically modify major clinical outcomes. The use of mTOR-I could be a valuable pharmacologic tool to minimize CNI complications and insure adequate immunosuppression. •Calcineurin inhibitor+antimetabolite+steroid is still the “gold standard” in immunosuppressive therapy.•Mammalian target-of-rapamycin inhibitors (mTOR-Is), instead of antimetabolites, do not modify major long-term clinical outcomes.•mTOR-I+CNI represents a valuable immunosuppressive strategy in transplantation.
ISSN:0041-1345
1873-2623
DOI:10.1016/j.transproceed.2018.02.209