Renal Function in De Novo Liver Transplant Recipients Receiving Different Prolonged‐Release Tacrolimus Regimens—The DIAMOND Study |
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Authors: | P. Trune ka,J. Klempnauer,W. O. Bechstein,J. Pirenne,S. Friman,A. Zhao,H. Isoniemi,L. Rostaing,U. Settmacher,C. M nch,M. Brown,N. Undre,G. Tisone |
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Affiliation: | 1. Transplantcentre, Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Prague, Czech Republic;2. Department of General, Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany;3. Department of Surgery, Goethe University Hospital and Clinics, Frankfurt, Germany;4. Abdominal Transplant Surgery, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium;5. The Transplant Institute, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Gothenburg, Sweden;6. Department of Abdominal Surgery, A.V. Vishnevsky Institute of Surgery, Moscow, Russian Federation;7. Department of Transplantation and Liver Surgery Clinic, Helsinki University Hospital, Helsinki, Finland;8. Department of Nephrology and Organ Transplantation, Toulouse University Hospital, Toulouse, France;9. Department of General, Visceral and Vascular Surgery, Jena University Hospital, Thuringia, Germany;10. Department of General, Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, Westpfalz‐Klinikum Hospital, Kaiserslautern, Germany;11. Astellas Pharma Inc., Northbrook, IL;12. Astellas Pharma Europe Ltd, London, United Kingdom;13. Liver Transplant Unit, Policlinico di Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy |
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Abstract: | DIAMOND: multicenter, 24‐week, randomized trial investigating the effect of different once‐daily, prolonged‐release tacrolimus dosing regimens on renal function after de novo liver transplantation. Arm 1: prolonged‐release tacrolimus (initial dose 0.2mg/kg/day); Arm 2: prolonged‐release tacrolimus (0.15–0.175mg/kg/day) plus basiliximab; Arm 3: prolonged‐release tacrolimus (0.2mg/kg/day delayed until Day 5) plus basiliximab. All patients received MMF plus a bolus of corticosteroid (no maintenance steroids). Primary endpoint: eGFR (MDRD4) at Week 24. Secondary endpoints: composite efficacy failure, BCAR and AEs. Baseline characteristics were comparable. Tacrolimus trough levels were readily achieved posttransplant; initially lower in Arm 2 versus 1 with delayed initiation in Arm 3. eGFR (MDRD4) was higher in Arms 2 and 3 versus 1 (p = 0.001, p = 0.047). Kaplan–Meier estimates of composite efficacy failure‐free survival were 72.0%, 77.6%, 73.9% in Arms 1–3. BCAR incidence was significantly lower in Arm 2 versus 1 and 3 (p = 0.016, p = 0.039). AEs were comparable. Prolonged‐release tacrolimus (0.15–0.175mg/kg/day) immediately posttransplant plus basiliximab and MMF (without maintenance corticosteroids) was associated with lower tacrolimus exposure, and significantly reduced renal function impairment and BCAR incidence versus prolonged‐release tacrolimus (0.2mg/kg/day) administered immediately posttransplant. Delayed higher‐dose prolonged‐release tacrolimus initiation significantly reduced renal function impairment compared with immediate posttransplant administration, but BCAR incidence was comparable. |
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Keywords: | calcineurin inhibitor clinical research/practice clinical trial glomerular filtration rate (GFR) immunosuppression/immune modulation immunosuppressant liver allograft function/dysfunction liver transplantation/hepatology liver transplantation: split tacrolimus |
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