Monitoring intracellular tacrolimus concentrations and its relationship with rejection in the early phase after renal transplantation

•The correlation between [Tac]cells and [Tac]blood, is poor.•Tacrolimus exposure and distribution appeared stable in the early phase after transplantation.•The inter-occasion variability in [Tac]cells is lower than the inter-patient variability.•[Tac]cells was not significantly associated with the o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical biochemistry 2022-03, Vol.101, p.9-15
Hauptverfasser: Francke, Marith I., Andrews, Louise M., Lan Le, Hoang, van de Velde, Daan, Dieterich, Marjolein, Udomkarnjananun, Suwasin, Clahsen-van Groningen, Marian C., Baan, Carla C., van Gelder, Teun, de Winter, Brenda C.M., Hesselink, Dennis A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The correlation between [Tac]cells and [Tac]blood, is poor.•Tacrolimus exposure and distribution appeared stable in the early phase after transplantation.•The inter-occasion variability in [Tac]cells is lower than the inter-patient variability.•[Tac]cells was not significantly associated with the occurrence of rejection. After kidney transplantation, rejection and drug-related toxicity occur despite tacrolimus whole-blood pre-dose concentrations ([Tac]blood) being within the target range. The tacrolimus concentration within peripheral blood mononuclear cells ([Tac]cells) might correlate better with clinical outcomes. The aim of this study was to investigate the correlation between [Tac]blood and [Tac]cells, the evolution of [Tac]cells and the [Tac]cells/[Tac]blood ratio, and to assess the relationship between tacrolimus concentrations and the occurrence of rejection. In this prospective study, samples for the measurement of [Tac]blood and [Tac]cells were collected on days 3 and 10 after kidney transplantation, and on the morning of a for-cause kidney transplant biopsy. Biopsies were reviewed according to the Banff 2019 update. Eighty-three [Tac]cells samples were measured of 44 kidney transplant recipients. The correlation between [Tac]cells and [Tac]blood was poor (Pearson’s r = 0.56 (day 3); r = 0.20 (day 10)). Both the dose-corrected [Tac]cells and the [Tac]cells/[Tac]blood ratio were not significantly different between days 3 and 10, and the median inter-occasion variability of the dose-corrected [Tac]cells and the [Tac]cells/[Tac]blood ratio were 19.4% and 23.4%, respectively (n = 24). Neither [Tac]cells, [Tac]blood, nor the [Tac]cells/[Tac]blood ratio were significantly different between patients with biopsy-proven acute rejection (n = 4) and patients with acute tubular necrosis (n = 4) or a cancelled biopsy (n = 9; p > 0.05). Tacrolimus exposure and distribution appeared stable in the early phase after transplantation. [Tac]cells was not significantly associated with the occurrence of rejection. A possible explanation for these results might be related to the low number of patients included in this study and also due to the fact that PBMCs are not a specific enough matrix to monitor tacrolimus concentrations.
ISSN:0009-9120
1873-2933
DOI:10.1016/j.clinbiochem.2021.12.002