Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.16 (calcineurin)
17,112 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Daclizumab (DZB), an interleukin-2 receptor blocker, has been shown to reduce the rate of acute rejection, while non-heart-beating kidney recipients have high rates of delayed graft function that may be prolonged by high levels of calcineurin inhibitors. This study assessed whether DZB could safely replace calcineurin inhibitors in the immediate postoperative period and promote recovery from ischemic acute tubular necrosis. Patients were randomized into one of two groups: DZB induction and daily mycophenolate mofetil (MMF; 2 g) with steroids (20 mg prednisone) or standard triple therapy with tacrolimus, MMF, and prednisone. Patients in the DZB arm were converted to the control arm when either the serum creatinine dropped to <350 micromol/L or there was biopsy evidence of acute rejection. Over 2 years, Leicester and Newcastle non-heart-beating donor (NHBD) centers recruited 51 patients. There was one patient death in the DZB arm, during the study period, after a nonfunctioning graft was removed. A total of two (8%) grafts in the DZB arm and three (11.5%) grafts in the control arm failed to function. The overall rate of immediate function improved from around 5% (pre-2001) to 28%. There were no significant differences in the incidence of acute rejection or graft function (GFR) at 3 months. Machine-perfused kidneys in DZB-treated recipients had the highest rates of immediate function (53%, P = .015). We found that a calcineurin-sparing regime is safe and may be beneficial for recipients of machine-perfused grafts damaged by warm ischemia.
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PMID:Evaluation of daclizumab to reduce delayed graft function in non-heart-beating renal transplantation: a prospective, randomized trial. 1591 62

Thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) may occur after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and is related in part to calcineurin inhibitor toxicity. We observed a higher-than-expected rate of TMA when calcineurin inhibitors were combined with sirolimus. To determine the incidence of and risk factors for TMA after HSCT, we performed a retrospective cohort analysis of myeloablative allogeneic HSCT recipients between 1997 and 2003. TMA diagnosis required the simultaneous occurrence of (1) creatinine increase >2 mg/dL or >50% above baseline, (2) schistocytosis, (3) increased lactate dehydrogenase, and (4) no evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulopathy. A total of 111 sirolimus-exposed subjects were compared with 216 nonexposed subjects after HSCT. TMA occurred in 10.8% of the sirolimus group and 4.2% in the nonsirolimus group (odds ratio, 2.79; P=.03). Sirolimus exposure was associated with TMA earlier than in nonsirolimus patients (25 versus 58 days; P=.04). Only the use of sirolimus (exact odds ratio, 3.49; P=.02) and grade II to IV acute graft-versus-host disease (exact odds ratio, 6.60; P=.0002) were associated with TMA in regression analyses. Treatment of TMA varied among affected individuals. Renal recovery was complete in 92% of sirolimus-treated patients. Overall survival after TMA diagnosis was better for sirolimus subjects than for nonsirolimus subjects (58.3% versus 11.1%; P=.02). Sirolimus seems to potentiate the effects of calcineurin inhibitors on TMA after HSCT. TMA associated with sirolimus seems reversible and has a favorable prognosis when compared with TMA associated with calcineurin inhibitors alone. A careful monitoring strategy for TMA should be used with a sirolimus-containing graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis regimen.
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PMID:Sirolimus and thrombotic microangiopathy after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. 1598 55

The major causes of renal transplant loss are death from vascular, malignant or infectious disease, and loss of the allograft from chronic renal dysfunction associated with the development of graft fibrosis and glomerulosclerosis. Chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) is the histologic description of the fibrosis, vascular and glomerular damage occurring in renal allografts. Clinical programs rely on monitoring change in serum creatinine for identification of patients at risk of CAN, but this change occurs late in the course of the disease, and underestimates the severity of pathologic change. CAN has several causes: ischemia-reperfusion injury, ineffectively or untreated clinical and subclinical rejection, and superimposed calcineurin inhibitor nephrotoxicity, exacerbating pre-existing donor disease. Once established, interstitial fibrosis and arteriolar hyalinosis lead to progressive glomerulosclerosis over the subsequent years. There have been a number of approaches to treatment aimed at reducing the impact of CAN, mostly centered around avoidance of calcineurin inhibitors through their elimination in all, or just selected, patients. These immunosuppression strategies combine corticosteroids with azathioprine or mycophenolate mofetil, and/or sirolimus and everolimus. Late identification of CAN in individual patients has meant that strategies for intervening to prevent chronic renal allograft dysfunction and subsequent graft loss tend to be "too little and far too late."
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PMID:Chronic renal allograft dysfunction. 1612 Aug 19

The effects of the calcineurin inhibitors tacrolimus (FK506) and cyclosporine (Neoral) on graft survival, function, and metabolic profile were evaluated in 69 patients receiving Neoral (group 1) and 54 patients receiving FK506 (group 2) for maintenance immunosuppression following kidney transplantation. Recipient and donor demographics and induction therapy were comparable, except for a higher number of sensitized patients in group 2 (n = 13). Acute rejection timing, severity, and infection rates and types were similar in both groups. During hospitalization, at 6 months, and at 1 year following transplantation, no significant differences were noted between groups in fasting glucose, serum cholesterol levels, triglyceride levels, or need for insulin or antihypertensive therapy. Mean serum creatinine levels on discharge (1.42 mg/dL +/- 0.14 vs 1.68 mg/dL +/- 0.3), at 1 month (1.45 mg/dL +/- 0.1 vs 1.39 mg/dL +/- 0.11), 3 months (1.46 mg/dL +/- 0.09 vs 1.32 mg/dL +/- 0.14), and 1 year (1.29 mg/dL +/- 0.08 vs 1.19 mg/dL +/- 0.09), but not at 6 months (1.42 +/- 0.37 vs 1.10 +/- 0.07; P = .001), were comparable between groups. The 1-year patient and graft survival rates were 98.3% for group 1 and 94.5% for group 2. When evaluated for acute rejection, infection, and metabolic differences, we conclude that both tacrolimus and cyclosporine are effective and safe calcineurin inhibitors for short-term use in kidney transplantation. A similar study is proposed to evaluate the long-term effects of both agents.
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PMID:Tacrolimus (FK506) versus cyclosporine microemulsion (neoral) as maintenance immunosuppression therapy in kidney transplant recipients. 1621 93

Conversion from calcineurin inhibitors (CNI) to sirolimus (SRL) has become an option in patients with chronic allograft nephropathy or other conditions. However, in some cases an increase of proteinuria has been reported after such therapeutic intervention. The aim of this study was to characterize the clinical course of this so far unexplained proteinuria after conversion. We performed a retrospective analysis evaluating 94 renal transplant patients from various Spanish centers. Proteinuria (629 determinations) and clinical developments were analyzed between 6 months before and 6 months after conversion. Patients were divided into three groups according to mean proteinuria before conversion (group A: <300 mg/d; group B: 300 to 2000 mg/d; and group C: >2 g/d). The mean proteinuria level was 1.69 g/24 h (n = 312 determinations) before and 2.36 g/24 h after conversion (n = 317 determinations; P = .006), which corresponds to an overall increase of 25% (1.55 to 1.69 g/24 h considering only determinations of 1 month before and 1 month after conversion; P = NS). We could not detect any clear correlation between proteinuria and serum creatinine nor between changes of proteinuria and changes of serum creatinine. A variance analysis for repeated measures showed an increase in proteinuria compared to the preconversion values (P = .003), and when the three groups of preconversion proteinuria were evaluated separately it could be observed that this change in the evolution of proteinuria was almost completely dependent of an increase in the group C (preconversion proteinuria greater than 2 g/d; P = .03), whereas in the other two groups changes were almost irrelevant. Finally, the switch to SRL in renal transplant recipients is followed by an increase in the level of proteinuria predominantly dependent of an increase in patients with high levels of preconversion proteinuria, whereas it seems to be irrelevant in patients without or with light or moderate proteinuria. These results suggest that this might not be a direct effect of SRL.
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PMID:Evolution of proteinuria after conversion from calcineurin inhibitors (CNI) to sirolimus (SRL) in renal transplant patients: a multicenter study. 1638 55

We report a series of 26 heart transplant recipients with renal impairment in which sirolimus was used as the basic immunosuppresive drug (without associated calcineurin inhibitors) to avoid further nephrotoxicity. Sirolimus (trough levels 10 to 12 ng/mL, average daily dose 3 mg) was used in two settings: de novo in 7 patients with significant preexistent renal impairment and as a chronic conversion in 19 stable patients with established renal failure (creatinine level >2 mg/dL). In all de novo patients (n = 7), the renal function significantly improved. Creatinine fell from 2.95 +/- 0.9 mg/dL to 1.41 +/- 0.4 mg/dL at follow-up (P = .0017). One patient died suddenly of a massive pulmonary embolism. Only one patient experienced histologic but reversible rejection. In one patient, anemia and diarrhea prompted sirolimus withdrawal. Five patients had infectious episodes: three bacterial pneumonias, one mediastinitis, and two CMV infections. In the chronic conversion group (n = 19), the improvement was mostly limited to patients with moderate renal failure (creatinine < or =2.5 mg/dL) in which creatinine fell from 2.24 +/- 0.2 to 1.9 +/- 0.27 mg/dL, P = .009). When basal creatinine was over 2.5 mg/dL, only one third of the patients improved after conversion. Two patients died: terminal renal failure and cerebrovascular accident. There were no clinical episodes of rejection. Secondary effects prompted the discontinuation of sirolimus in five patients: two definite and one possible interstitial pneumonitis and two cases of anemia). The symptoms resolved after sirolimus withdrawal. Six patients had infection: four pneumonias, one sepsis, and one cutaneous abscess. Sirolimus is an interesting alternative to calcineurin inhibitors in selected patients with renal impairment. It prevents renal failure in de novo recipients at high risk of catastrophic renal damage and ameliorates renal dysfunction in chronic patients with moderate renal dysfunction. Given the high incidence of secondary effects, the adequate dosage and the secondary effects profile needs further study.
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PMID:Sirolimus as an alternative to anticalcineurin therapy in heart transplantation: experience of a single center. 1638 15

We conducted a retrospective analysis of the influence of full doses of calcineurin inhibitors [8-10 mg kg-1 day-1 cyclosporine (N = 80), or 0.2-0.3 mg kg-1 day-1 tacrolimus (N = 68)] administered from day 1 after transplantation on the transplant outcomes of a high-risk population. Induction therapy was used in 13% of the patients. Patients also received azathioprine (2 mg kg(-1) day(-1), N = 58) or mycophenolate mofetil (2 g/day, N = 90), and prednisone (0.5 mg kg(-1) day(-1), N = 148). Mean time on dialysis was 79 +/- 41 months, 12% of the cases were re-transplants, and 21% had panel reactive antibodies > 10%. In 43% of donors the cause of death was cerebrovascular disease and 27% showed creatinine above 1.5 mg/dL. The incidence of slow graft function (SGF) and delayed graft function (DGF) was 15 and 60%, respectively. Mean time to last dialysis and to nadir creatinine were 18 +/- 15 and 34 +/- 20 days, respectively. Mean creatinine at 1 year after transplantation was 1.48 +/- 0.50 mg/dL (DGF 1.68 +/- 0.65 vs SGF 1.67 +/- 0.66 vs immediate graft function (IGF) 1.41 +/- 0.40 mg/dL, P = 0.089). The incidence of biopsy-confirmed acute rejection was 22% (DGF 31%, SGF 10%, IGF 8%). One-year patient and graft survival was 92.6 and 78.4%, respectively. The incidence of cytomegalovirus disease, post-transplant diabetes mellitus and malignancies was 28, 8.1, and 0%, respectively. Compared to previous studies, the use of initial full doses of calcineurin inhibitors without antibody induction in patients with SGF or DGF had no negative impact on patient and graft survival.
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PMID:Impact of initial exposure to calcineurin inhibitors on kidney graft function of patients at high risk to develop delayed graft function. 1640 Apr 63

Mycophenolic acid (MPA), the active metabolite of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) has been introduced into renal transplant immunosuppressant protocols in combination with calcineurin inhibitors (CNIs) and steroids. This study compared the pharmacokinetic profiles of MPA and its major metabolite MPA glucuronide (MPAG) in combination with tacrolimus (TAC) or cyclosporine (CyA) during the maintenance period (>6 months) following renal transplantation. There was no difference between TAC and CyA-treated groups in MPA plasma concentration before drug administration (C(0)). MPA C(0) in TAC and CyA-treated patients did not differ from that in patients who were not treated with a CNI. In patients treated with a CNI, MPAG C(0) was significantly greater in those treated with CyA compared with TAC. The MPAG/MPA ratio in CyA-treated patients was significantly greater than that in the TAC-treated group. We observed that C(0) of MPA was negatively correlated with that of TAC and CyA. Positive correlation between MPA C(0), MPAG C(0) and serum creatinine was stronger in patients treated with CyA compared with TAC. Our study suggests that CyA, but not TAC, inhibits enterohepatic circulation of MPAG as a secondary excretion pathway, and that renal function makes a major contribution to elimination of MPA and MPAG. We indicate that it may be necessary to estimate biliary excretion of MPAG to avoid the risk of intestinal injury in patients receiving combination therapy with TAC during the maintenance period.
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PMID:Effects of calcineurin inhibitors on pharmacokinetics of mycophenolic acid and its glucuronide metabolite during the maintenance period following renal transplantation. 1687 98

Previous studies have shown that renal injury initiated by a lethal dose of S-1,2-dichlorovinyl-l-cysteine (DCVC) progresses due to inhibition of cell division and hence renal repair, leading to acute renal failure (ARF) and death in mice. Renal injury initiated by low to moderate doses of DCVC is repaired by timely and adequate stimulation of renal cell division, tubular repair, restoration of renal structure and function leading to survival of mice. Recent studies have established that mice primed with a low dose of DCVC (15 mg/kg i.p.) 72 h before administration of a normally lethal dose (75 mg/kg i.p.) are protected from ARF and death (nephro-autoprotection). We showed that renal cell division and tissue repair stimulated by the low dose are sustained even after the lethal dose administration resulting in survival from ARF and death. If renal cell division induced by the low dose is indeed the critical mechanism of this autoprotection, then its ablation by the antimitotic agent colchicine (1.5 mg CLC/kg i.p.) should abolish autoprotection. The present interventional experiments were designed to test the hypothesis that DCVC autoprotection is due to stimulated cell division and tissue repair by the priming low dose. CLC intervention at 42 and 66 h after the priming dose resulted in marked progressive elevation of plasma blood urea nitrogen and creatinine resulting in ARF and death of mice. Light microscopic examination of hematoxylin and eosin-stained kidney sections revealed progression of renal necrosis concordant with progressively failing renal function. With CLC intervention, S-phase stimulation (as assessed by BrdU pulse labeling), G(1)-to-S phase clearance, and cell division were diminished essentially abolishing the promitogenic effect of the priming low dose of DCVC. Phospho-retinoblastoma protein (P-pRB), a crucial protein for S-phase stimulation, and other cellular signaling mechanisms regulating P-pRB were investigated. We report that decreased P-pRB via activation of protein phosphatase-1 by CLC is the critical mechanism of this inhibited S-phase stimulation and ablation of autoprotection with CLC intervention. These findings lend additional support to the notion that stimulated cell division and renal tissue repair by the priming dose of DCVC are the critical mechanisms that allow sustained compensatory tissue repair and survival of mice in nephro-autoprotection.
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PMID:Preplaced cell division: a critical mechanism of autoprotection against S-1,2-dichlorovinyl-L-cysteine-induced acute renal failure and death in mice. 1649 11

The mTOR inhibitor sirolimus improves renal transplant function compared with the nephrotoxic calcineurin inhibitors. We evaluated retrospectively the adverse events in 119 of 134 patients getting sirolimus which seemed to be caused by sirolimus. Patients were converted to sirolimus because of malignancies (n = 47), a creeping creatinine (n = 33), or hypertension (n = 26). One cohort had started sirolimus from the time of transplantation (n = 28). A rise in serum lipids and a decrease in hemoglobin were seen relatively regularly, while arthralgia, peripheral edema, gastrointestinal complaints, skin disorders, electrolyte disturbances, and infections occurred only occasionally. Interestingly, 31% of patients developed doubling or more proteinuria. Among renal biopsies, 9/13 showed a glomerulopathy which in 6 cases was de novo and in 3 cases, a presumed recurrence of the primary kidney disease. Thus, we think that caution is required, particularly in connection with preexisting glomerular disease.
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PMID:Side effects of sirolimus. 1664 52


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