Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Query: EC:2.6.1.1 (
aspartate aminotransferase
)
21,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 154 blood samples from adult and pediatric liver transplant recipients with variable degrees of hepatic and renal dysfunction, the specific monoclonal antibody-based
Sandimmune
RIA kit gave CsA results that were highly correlated with HPLC values. In contrast, assay of CsA levels with the PARIA in 213 samples showed values that varied between 1.8 and 18.8 times those determined by HPLC. In adults, the extent of this variation in the CsA HPLC/PARIA ratio was highly correlated with values of BIL and to a lesser extent with serum ALP; additionally, in children, correlations with
AST
and GGT were noted.
...
PMID:Blood cyclosporine concentrations in liver transplant recipients: assay method and influence of changed hepatic and renal function. 329 Dec 74
At our center, we have performed liver transplantation since 1995 with a rapid-taper steroid protocol (weaning steroids by day 14 posttransplantation). Beginning in 2000, we further reduced the use of corticosteroids to 3 days and added sirolimus to our immunosuppressive regimen. We report our experience with 39 patients who underwent liver transplantation with either tacrolimus or cyclosporin A (
Neoral
; Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp., Summit, NJ) and sirolimus, with a 3-day tapered dose of corticosteroids. Thirty-two patients received a cadaveric graft and 7 patients received a right hepatic lobe from a living donor. All patients initially were administered either tacrolimus (0.1 mg/kg/d) or cyclosporin A (10 mg/kg/d) and sirolimus (6 mg/d for 1 day, followed by 2 mg/d), in addition to methylprednisolone on the first 3 days (1, 0.5, and 0.5 g/d) after transplantation. Patients were administered corticosteroids for presumptive or biopsy-proven evidence of acute cellular rejection (methylprednisolone, 1, 0.5, and 0.5 g on 3 successive days). Seventeen patients were administered tacrolimus and 22 patients were administered cyclosporin A. Six patients were excluded from analysis because they were administered sirolimus for less than 2 weeks. Mean duration of follow-up was 124 days. Patient survival was 36 of 39 patients (92%), and graft survival was 35 of 39 grafts (89%). Ten of 33 patients (30%) experienced 12 episodes of rejection (7 biopsy proven, 5 presumptive) compared with 70% in historical controls (P <.01). OKT3 was required in 1 of 33 patients (3%) compared with 37% in controls (P <.01). Twenty-six of 33 patients (79%) were not administered prednisone, and 7 of 33 patients (21%) were administered prednisone for reasons other than rejection. Posttransplantation, there was no significant change in values for creatinine, glucose,
aspartate aminotransferase
, bilirubin, cholesterol, and white blood cell counts. Platelet counts were significantly reduced, and hematocrits were significantly elevated (P <.05). Liver transplantation may be successfully performed with minimal use of corticosteroids by using sirolimus and either tacrolimus or cyclosporin A. Despite the absence of prednisone from our immunosuppressive protocol, the incidence of rejection and OKT3 use was lower than in historical controls. Patient and graft survival rates were identical to those of historical controls. The findings in this report will serve as the basis for a formal trial evaluating the efficacy of sirolimus in liver transplantation.
...
PMID:Liver transplantation using sirolimus and minimal corticosteroids (3-day taper). 1130 95
Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), a chronic T-cell-mediated liver injury, is treated with corticosteroids with or without Azathioprine. Corticosteroids are not universally effective and have serious side effects. Cyclosporin A was effective in refractory cases. To assess efficacy and safety of Cyclosporin A (
Neoral
) in induction of remission in AIH patients this study was performed. Nineteen consenting AIH patients (nine treatment-naive) were treated with cyclosporin A in an open label trial and followed for 26 weeks. Liver biopsy was done and hepatitis activity index (HAI) determined at the beginning and end of treatment. Four patients did not complete the study for various reasons. Mean
AST
and ALT levels decreased from 948.7 +/- 103.5 and 454.8 +/- 354 to 100.6 +/- 111.8 and 78.5 +/- 40.3 (P < 0.03, P < 0.001) respectively. HAI decreased from 15.2 +/- 3.16 to 7.14 +/- 4.01 (P < 0.005). Serum creatinine did not change significantly. In conclusion, low-dose cyclosporin A appears to be safe and effective even in treatment-naive autoimmune hepatitis patients. Randomized controlled trials are warranted.
...
PMID:Cyclosporin A is a promising alternative to corticosteroids in autoimmune hepatitis. 1141 11