research
Individualisation of Mycophenolate Mofetil Therapy: Explaining variability in mycophenolic acid pharmacokinetics and introducing therapeutic
- Publication date
- 24 January 2007
- Publisher
- The prodrug mycophenolate mofetil contains the active compound mycophenolic acid (MPA), which has
immunosuppressive properties. It is used to prevent acute rejection after solid organ transplantation.
In renal transplantation, the dose recommendation for mycophenolate mofetil is 1000 mg twice daily
for adult patients. This fixed dose strategy for mycophenolate mofetil is remarkable in the field of
transplantation as most other immunosuppressive drugs are used in an individualised dose, often
based on drug concentration measurements. During the use of mycophenolate mofetil in the past ten
years, data have become available which provide four reasons to question the justification of a fixed
mycophenolate mofetil dose. The first reason is the existence of a concentration-effect relationship: the
risk for acute rejection is lower when exposure to MPA is higher. This has led to the adoption of a target
exposure range for MPA area-under-the-curve (AUC0-12) values of 30 to 60 mg*h/L. The second reason
is the large between-patient variability in MPA pharmacokinetics, reported to be more than 10-fold for
MPA AUC0-12. The third reason is that MPA exposure increases over time after transplantation despite
a fixed dose. Finally, exposure to MPA is significantly influenced by the use of several other drugs.
The result of these four factors is that with the use of a standard dose of mycophenolate mofetil, an
important subset of renal transplant recipients will have MPA exposure outside the target range, and
may therefore be at risk for acute rejection or toxicity. Individualisation of the mycophenolate mofetil
dose is likely to improve exposure to MPA and may optimise clinical outcome.
The aim of this thesis was to develop recommendations about when and how to individualise
the mycophenolate mofetil dose. Two hypotheses in this regard were addressed, formulated in
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