10 research outputs found

    Practical Recommendations for Long-term Management of Modifiable Risks in Kidney and Liver Transplant Recipients

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    Binding Pose Flip Explained via Enthalpic and Entropic Contributions

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    The anomalous binding modes of five highly similar fragments of TIE2 inhibitors, showing three distinct binding poses, are investigated. We report a quantitative rationalization for the changes in binding pose based on molecular dynamics simulations. We investigated five fragments in complex with the transforming growth factor β receptor type 1 kinase domain. Analyses of these simulations using Grid Inhomogeneous Solvation Theory (GIST), p<i>K</i><sub>A</sub> calculations, and a tool to investigate enthalpic differences upon binding unraveled the various thermodynamic contributions to the different binding modes. While one binding mode flip can be rationalized by steric repulsion, the second binding pose flip revealed a different protonation state for one of the ligands, leading to different enthalpic and entropic contributions to the binding free energy. One binding pose is stabilized by the displacement of entropically unfavored water molecules (binding pose determined by solvation entropy), ligands in the other binding pose are stabilized by strong enthalpic interactions, overcompensating the unfavorable water entropy in this pose (binding pose determined by enthalpic interactions). This analysis elucidates unprecedented details determining the flipping of the binding modes, which can elegantly explain the experimental findings for this system

    Improved Adherence to Tacrolimus Once-Daily Formulation in Renal Recipients

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    Background. With effective agents available to prevent posttransplantation acute organ rejection, medication adherence becomes a key factor for successful treatment outcomes after renal transplantation. A once-daily, modified-release oral formulation of tacrolimus has been developed to simplify dosing and improve medication adherence. Methods. Adherence Measurement in Stable Renal Transplant Patients Following Conversion From Prograft to Advagraf is a randomized multicenter controlled trial to evaluate adherence between a tacrolimus once-daily regimen and a tacrolimus twice-daily regimen using an electronic monitor to document drug intake. After enrolment, all patients continued the twice-daily regimen for 3 months and then were randomized 2: 1 between the two formulations and followed for 6 months. Adherence was decomposed into patients' persistence and implementation of each regimen. Results. Two hundred nineteen patients (45% male; 3 +/- 2 years after transplantation) were analyzed (145 once daily and 74 twice daily). At 6 months after randomization, 81.5% of the once-daily group and 71.9% of the twice-daily group remained persistent with the treatment (P=0.0824). Among patients who remained engaged with the regimen, 88.2% of the once-daily group and 78.8% of the twice-daily group (P=0.0009) took the prescribed number of daily doses. When the patients took the twice-daily regimen, the average percentage of missed doses was 11.7% in the morning and 14.2% in the evening (P=0.0035). Conclusions. Regimen implementation of tacrolimus once daily is significantly superior to the twice-daily regimen. There was a residual prevalence of suboptimal adherence that will have to be countered by means other than reformulation and regimen simplification. Electronically compiled dosing histories provide detailed data on patient adherence that can be used for efficient medication management

    Bone mineral density, bone turnover markers, and incident fractures in de novo kidney transplant recipients

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    peer reviewedKidney transplant recipients are at increased risk of fractures. This prospective observational study investigated whether areal bone mineral density (aBMD) as assessed by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry can predict incident fragility fractures in de novo kidney transplant recipients and whether bone turnover markers increase diagnostic accuracy. Parameters of bone mineral metabolism including parathyroid hormone (PTH), fibroblast growth factor 23, sclerostin, calcidiol and calcitriol, and bone turnover markers were assessed in blood samples collected immediately prior to kidney transplantation in 518 adult recipients. aBMD was measured at several skeletal sites within 14 days posttransplant. Thirty patients had a history of a fragility fracture at the time of transplantation, and osteopenia or osteoporosis at the femoral neck was observed in 77%. Bone turnover markers were inversely correlated with aBMD at all skeletal sites. Low aBMD and low PTH were associated with history of fragility fracture at the time of transplantation, independent of age, gender, and comorbidity. During a median post-transplant follow-up of 5.2 years, 38 patients sustained a fragility fracture, corresponding to a fracture incidence of 14.1 per 1000 person-years. Low aBMD at the hip and lumbar spine were associated with incident fractures, independent of classical determinants, including history of fracture. PTH and bone turnover markers at the time of transplantation failed to predict incident fractures. In conclusion, aBMD is low, correlates inversely with bone turnover, and predicts incident fractures in de novo kidney transplant recipients. © 2019 International Society of Nephrolog

    Long-Term Prolonged-Release Tacrolimus-Based Immunosuppression in De Novo KidneyTransplant Recipients : 5-Y Prospective Follow-Up of Patients in the ADVANCE study

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    Background. Although prolonged-release tacrolimus (PR-T) is widely approved for posttransplantation immunosuppres-sion in kidney recipients, large-scale studies are required to assess long-term outcomes. We present follow-up data from the ADVANCE trial, in which kidney transplant patients (KTPs) received corticosteroid minimization with PR-T. Methods. ADVANCE was a 24-wk, randomized, open-label, phase-4 study. De novo KTPs received PR-T with basiliximab and mycophe-nolate mofetil and were randomized to receive an intraoperative corticosteroid bolus plus tapered corticosteroids until day 10 (arm 1) or an intraoperative corticosteroid bolus (arm 2). In this 5-y, noninterventional follow-up, patients received maintenance immunosuppression according to standard practice. Primary endpoint included graft survival (Kaplan-Meier). Secondary end-points included patient survival, biopsy-confirmed acute rejection–free survival, and estimated glomerular filtration rate (4-vari-able modification of diet in renal disease). Results. Follow-up study included 1125 patients. Overall graft survival at 1 and 5 y posttransplant was 93.8% and 88.1%, respectively, and was similar between treatment arms. At 1 and 5 y, patient survival was 97.8% and 94.4%, respectively. Five-year graft and patient survival rates in KTPs who remained on PR-T were 91.5% and 98.2%, respectively. Cox proportional hazards analysis demonstrated similar risk of graft loss and death between treatment arms. Five-year biopsy-confirmed acute rejection–free survival was 84.1%. Mean ± standard deviation values of estimated glo-merular filtration rate were 52.7 ± 19.5 and 51.1 ± 22.4 mL/min/1.73 m2 at 1 and 5 y, respectively. Fifty adverse drug reactions were recorded, probably tacrolimus-related, in 12 patients (1.5%). Conclusions. Graft survival and patient survival—over-all and for KTPs who remained on PR-T—were numerically high and similar between treatment arms at 5 y posttransplant

    Consensus report on therapeutic drug monitoring of mycophenolic acid in solid organ transplantation

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    With the increasing use of mycophenolic acid (MPA) in solid organ transplantation, the need for more accurate drug dosing has become evident. Personalized immunosuppressive therapy requires better strategies for avoidance of drug-related toxicity while maintaining efficacy. Few studies have assessed the clinical usefulness of therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) of MPA in solid organ transplantation in a prospective way, and they have produced opposing results. To provide clinicians with an objective and balanced clinical interpretation of the current scientific evidence on TDM of MPA, a consensus meeting involving 47 experts from around the world was commissioned by The Transplantation Society and held in Rome on November 20 to 21, 2008. The goal of this consensus meeting was to offer information to transplant practitioners on clinically relevant pharmacokinetic characteristics of MPA, to rationalize the basis for currently advised target exposure ranges for MPA in various types of organ transplantation, and to summarize available methods for application of MPA TDM in clinical practice. Although this consensus report does not evaluate the final role of MPA TDM in transplantation, it seeks to examine the current scientific evidence for concentration-controlled dosing of MPA. Copyrigh
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