2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.healun.2008.07.020
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Avoidance of Calcineurin Inhibitors With Use of Proliferation Signal Inhibitors in De Novo Heart Transplantation With Renal Failure

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Cited by 38 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Twenty-five (83%) had significant preexisting glomerular pathology. Likewise, 15 to 40% of patients who underwent cardiac transplantation had significantly impaired kidney function at the time of transplantation, with only incomplete resolution in many after successful transplantation with or without CNI-based therapy, indicating that other mechanisms may be operative (54). Even so, given the 15 to 20% incidence of CKD attributed to CNI use outside of kidney transplantation (24), it is difficult to extend these observations to support the conclusion that CNI nephrotoxicity is the major cause of late kidney allograft failure.…”
Section: Alternatives To An Incomplete Paradigmmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Twenty-five (83%) had significant preexisting glomerular pathology. Likewise, 15 to 40% of patients who underwent cardiac transplantation had significantly impaired kidney function at the time of transplantation, with only incomplete resolution in many after successful transplantation with or without CNI-based therapy, indicating that other mechanisms may be operative (54). Even so, given the 15 to 20% incidence of CKD attributed to CNI use outside of kidney transplantation (24), it is difficult to extend these observations to support the conclusion that CNI nephrotoxicity is the major cause of late kidney allograft failure.…”
Section: Alternatives To An Incomplete Paradigmmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, a marked reduction in CNI dose is essential since everolimus with standard-dose CNI actually impairs renal function (13). Thus, immunosuppression based on an mTOR inhibitor and early CNI withdrawal in de novo heart transplant patients has been considered, but caution due to concerns about side effects has meant that experience is limited to a few observational studies of everolimus or sirolimus with CNI avoidance (12,14). The only randomized trial of de novo heart transplant recipients to date, in which sirolimus was administered with CNI withdrawal, was terminated prematurely due to side effects (15).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3 Furthermore, liver-and heart-transplanted patients are likely to have existing renal abnormalities before they are exposed to CNIs, which makes it difficult to interpret interstitial fibrosis occurring some years after their introduction in these patients. 4,5 Lastly, kidneys from rodents experimentally given CNIs for weeks exhibit histologic features that resemble the supposedly CNI-induced IF/TA observed in humans; however, supratherapeutic doses of CNI have often been used that are not necessarily patient-relevant. Whatever the repercussions that CNIs may have on kidneys, the question of whether they correspond to irreversible structural changes or are, on the contrary, reversible once they are withdrawn is of clinical significance: Removing CNIs from the regimen of patients with a well functioning graft is currently in vogue, but it is also risky.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%