In this Phase 2b study, 331 low-to-moderate risk de novo kidney transplant patients (approximately 60% deceased donors) were randomized to a more intensive (MI) or less intensive (LI) regimen of tofacitinib (CP-690, 550), an oral Janus kinase inhibitor or cyclosporine (CsA). All patients received basiliximab induction, mycophenolic acid and corticosteroids. Primary endpoints were: incidence of biopsy-proven acute rejection (BPAR) with a serum creatinine increase of ≥0.3 mg/dL and ≥20% (clinical BPAR) at Month 6 and measured GFR at Month 12. Similar 6-month incidences of clinical BPAR (11%, 7% and 9%) were observed for MI, LI and CsA. Measured GFRs were higher (p < 0.01) at Month 12 for MI and LI versus CsA (65 mL/min, 65 mL/min vs. 54 mL/min). Fewer (p < 0.05) patients in MI or LI developed chronic allograft nephropathy at Month 12 compared with CsA (25%, 24% vs. 48%). Serious infections developed in 45%, 37% and 25% of patients in MI, LI and CsA, respectively. Anemia, neutropenia and posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorder occurred more frequently in MI and LI compared with CsA. Tofacitinib was equivalent to CsA in preventing acute rejection, was associated with improved renal function and less chronic allograft histological injury, but had side-effects at the doses evaluated.
Brazil is a country with over 190 000 000 inhabitants and a health system composed of a large public, government managed system. Between 1999 and 2010 the number of deceased donors increased by 161%, from 3.8 to 9.9 pmp, and the number of solid organ transplants increased by 121%, from 2891 to 6402. This growth was a consequence of the creation of a well-organized national transplant program. Government funding, decentralization and educational investment in transplant coordinators and related professional were decisive. In 2009 Brazil was the second largest country in the absolute number of kidney transplants (n = 4259). There are significant region disparities in performance which are mainly due to the development status. Improvements in transplant and research regulations resulted in an increasing participation of Brazilian transplant centers in multicenter trials, reaching over 44 studies during the last 11 years. Brazilian centers have been involved in clinical trials using everolimus, sirolimus, fingolimod, mycophenolate mofetyl, mycophenolate sodium, tacrolimus modified-release, sotrastaurin, belatacept, JAK3 inhibitor CP690,550 and valganciclovir. The still increasing number of transplants performed every year along with more efficient regulatory and sanitary analysis, organized clinical research programs and reduction in region performance disparities will eventually increase even more the participation of Brazil in trials worldwide.
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