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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
It is estimated that there are greater than 100000 kidney transplant recipients with a functioning graft in the United States. Recent advances in immunosuppression have improved short-term graft survival rates and decreased early mortality by decreasing the incidence and therapy for acute rejection episodes. For those accepted on the waiting list, transplant prolongs patient survival compared with remaining on dialysis. During the 1990s, 3 new immunosuppressive drugs were introduced in clinical kidney transplantation. All were approved for use by the Food and Drug Administration after large, controlled, randomized trials. Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), when combined with cyclosporine (CSA) and prednisone, lowered acute rejection rates by nearly 50% compared with control.
Tacrolimus
compared with CSA also significantly reduced acute rejection rates in kidney transplant recipients, but was associated with a significant increase in posttransplant
diabetes mellitus
(PTDM) in the early trials. When evaluated in combination with MMF, the incidence of PTDM was much lower. At the end of the decade, sirolimus was shown in several randomized trials to lower acute rejection rates and is believed to be less nephrotoxic compared with calcineurin inhibitors. All of the randomized trials were not statistically powered to assess long-term superiority. Registry analyses have been performed that appear to show some long-term benefit of immunosuppressive therapy with MMF. Other outcome assessments in kidney transplant recipients include risk factors for chronic allograft nephropathy, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and bone disease. Although there are few randomized trials, understanding of the significance of these common complications has progressed and strategies for therapy and intervention have been developed. This article focuses on the randomized trials of immunosuppressive therapy and complications associated with use of these drugs. In addition, we review the current management and intervention for the comorbidities associated with the long-term clinical management of the kidney transplant recipient.
...
PMID:Outcomes in kidney transplantation. 1283 99
A retrospective analysis of 381 pediatric heart-transplant recipients was performed to determine the frequency, characteristics, and risk factors for post-transplant
diabetes
. The rate of post-transplant
diabetes
was 1.8% with antithymocyte globulin, cyclosporine and azathioprine as primary immunosuppressive therapy. Time from transplant to
diabetes
was 0.25-13 years.
Diabetes
was characterized by reversibility, and lack of insulinopenia and autoimmunity. The post-transplant
diabetes
rate in tacrolimus-converted children (n = 45) was 8.8%. In tacrolimus-converted children, age at transplant, mean and maximum tacrolimus blood levels, and first-year rejection episodes were higher in the post-transplant
diabetes
group, which also consistently had DR-mismatched transplants and HLA DR3/DR4 haplotypes. Body mass index was not different between diabetic and control tacrolimus-converted children. In conclusion, pediatric post-transplant
diabetes
may be related to reversible insulin resistance.
Tacrolimus
levels, HLA DR mismatch, and older age at transplant may predispose to post-transplant
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Pediatric post-transplant diabetes: data from a large cohort of pediatric heart-transplant recipients. 1285 35
Tacrolimus
(Tac), which blocks T- and B-cell proliferation by inhibiting calcineurin, was first used for immunosuppression following heart transplant (HT) in 1989. Two multicenter randomized trials have compared Tac to the oil-based cyclosporine (CsA) formulation (both combined with azathioprine and steroids) in HT patients. The two drugs displayed similar patient survival rates and incidences of rejection, nephrotoxicity,
diabetes
, and infections. The Tac group however, showed a lower incidence of arterial hypertension (and, in one study, of dyslipidemia). A pilot study of Tac in combination with mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) and steroids suggested that maintenance of serum mycophenolic acid levels at 2.5 to 4.5 microg/mL yields lower rejection rates without greater toxicity than previous regimens. Currently, a European multicenter randomized trial is comparing Tac with Neoral CsA, both used in combination with MMF, steroids, and induction antibodies. For patients undergoing primary immunosuppression with CsA, Tac has proved effective for rescue from steroid-resistant acute rejection. It also has tentatively been used without other drugs in selected patients. It is a valid alternative to CsA in current immunosuppressive regimens, because it does not cause gingival hyperplasia or hirsutism and, thus, may improve the quality of life and treatment compliance of female and pediatric patients. It may be preferable to CsA for patients with arterial hypertension or intractable dyslipidemia. Current and future studies will clarify the efficacy and safety of regimens combining Tac with MMF or rapamycin.
...
PMID:Tacrolimus in heart transplantation. 1296 69
To investigate the usefulness of low-dose
FK506
for the treatment of myasthenia gravis (MG), we treated 19 patients with generalized MG in a 16-week open clinical trial of
FK506
(3-5 mg/day). At the end of the trial, total MG scores (range: 0-27 points) improved by 3 points or more in 7 of 19 patients (37%), and activities of daily living (ADL) scores (range: 0-6 points) also improved by 1 point or more in 8 of 19 patients (42%). Nine of 19 patients (47%) showed improvement in either MG or ADL scores. Significant reduction of anti-acetylcholine receptor antibody titers and interleukin 2 production were observed at the end of this study. Minor but commonly observed side effects were an increase in neutrophil count and a decrease in lymphocyte count. No serious adverse events such as renal toxicity or
diabetes mellitus
were observed during the 16-week treatment period.
FK506
could safely serve as an adjunct to steroid therapy for MG at low dosage.
...
PMID:Clinical study of FK506 in patients with myasthenia gravis. 1457 58
Using a swine abdominal organ cluster transplantation model, we investigated the postoperative function and immunological reactions of a cluster graft and evaluated the immunosuppressive activity of
FK506
. The animals were divided into two groups. Group I (n = 6) served as controls, while in group II (n = 6) a daily dose of 0.1 mg/kg
FK506
was given intramuscularly. Postoperative pancreatitis was the most important factor influencing the early outcome in both groups. In group I, the cause of late death was cachexia due to
diabetes mellitus
induced by pancreatic rejection. In group II, emaciation despite a well-functioning graft was the principal cause of late death. Histologically, in group I the grade of rejection in the pancreas was more severe than in the liver, and no sign of rejection was observed in group II. In conclusion, the pancreas suffered more severe rejection than the liver, and
FK506
could significantly prevent cluster allograft rejection in this model.
...
PMID:Abdominal organ cluster transplantation in pigs and FK506. 1462 61
An altered cellular glucocorticoid (GC) sensitivity is associated with several pathophysiological conditions such as asthma,
diabetes
, or rheumatoid arthritis. Several bioassays have been developed and employed to assess cellular GC sensitivity of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), but correlations between these have rarely been investigated. We have compared four mitogen-based assays and an
FK506
binding protein 51 (FKBP51) mRNA induction assay, using ten controls and a GC-resistant patient. The mitogen-based assays were performed using either diluted whole blood or isolated PBMC, and showed relatively large assay variations for the parameters maximal effect and half-maximal effect concentration. The FKBP51 assay showed smaller intra-assay and within-individual variation compared with the mitogen-based assays. The whole blood-based mitogen assays and the FKBP51 assay clearly discriminated the GC-resistant patient from the controls but, in contrast to expectations, both PBMC-based mitogen assays did not. The GC-induced FKBP51 mRNA increase in PBMC may be an alternative to determine an altered individual GC sensitivity with several advantages as compared with mitogen-based assays, such as the use of unstimulated PBMC, and a better intra- and inter-individual reproducibility.
...
PMID:A comparison of in vitro bioassays to determine cellular glucocorticoid sensitivity. 1471 78
Tacrolimus
causes posttransplant
diabetes mellitus
, although the pathogenetic mechanisms remain controversial. We studied the mechanism of tacrolimus-induced impairment of insulin secretion using isolated rat pancreatic islets.
Tacrolimus
caused reductions in DNA and insulin contents per islet during 7-d culture.
Tacrolimus
time-dependently suppressed glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, and at a therapeutic concentration of 0.01 micromol/liter, it suppressed glucose-stimulated insulin secretion to 32 +/- 5% of the control value after 7-d incubation.
Tacrolimus
did not change islet glucose utilization and oxidation, ATP production, insulin mRNA expression, or the capacity for high glucose to increase intracellular Ca(2+), but altered the rapid frequency oscillations of Ca(2+) concentration.
Tacrolimus
suppressed insulin secretion stimulated by mitochondrial fuel (combination of l-leucine and l-glutamine, and alpha-ketoisocaproate) and glibenclamide, but not by l-arginine.
Tacrolimus
suppressed insulin secretion induced by carbachol and by a protein kinase C agonist in the presence or absence of extracellular Ca(2+). Under stringent Ca(2+)-free conditions, tacrolimus did not affect mastoparan-induced insulin secretion, but suppressed its glucose augmentation. Our results suggest that tacrolimus impairs glucose-stimulated insulin secretion downstream of the rise in intracellular Ca(2+) at insulin exocytosis, and that protein kinase C-mediated (Ca(2+)-dependent and independent) and Ca(2+)-independent GTP signaling pathways may be involved. However, tacrolimus-induced impaired insulin secretion was reversed 3 d after removal of the drug. Our study demonstrated that tacrolimus impairs insulin secretion at multiple steps in stimulus-secretion coupling.
...
PMID:Tacrolimus impairment of insulin secretion in isolated rat islets occurs at multiple distal sites in stimulus-secretion coupling. 1496 91
Early results of an alteration in immunosuppressive protocol of tacrolimus conversion at a mean follow-up of 16 (range 1 to 36) months are presented with a mean time after transplantation of 34 +/- 1.4 months (range 1 to 158 months). Chronic allograft nephropathy in 16 (17%) patients, nephrotoxicity related to cyclosporine in 27(23%) patients and steroids resistant acute rejection in 64 (58%) represented the indications for tacrolimus conversion. Before starting tacrolimus there were 1 acute rejection episode in 37 patients, 2 in 17 patients, and 3 in 10 patients. After the drug conversion, 1 acute rejection occurred in 18 and 2 acute rejection in 4 patients. Graft loss was seen in 16 (16%) patients after drug conversion.
Tacrolimus
was withdrawn due to
diabetes mellitus
(n = 9), epilepsy (n = 4), and severe Nocardia sepsis, lymphoma and Kaposi sarcoma (each in one patient). Decreases in serum creatinine and increases in blood glucose levels were significantly associated with the tacrolimus doses (P = 0.0004 and P = 0.0400, respectively). The increase in creatinine clearance values were closely related to higher tacrolimus levels. The target range with maximum efficacy and minimum toxicity seemed to be 10 to 15 ng/mL.
Tacrolimus
conversion can be successful in cases of rejection and nephrotoxicity, but dose-dependent blood glucose elevations require close observation in these patients.
...
PMID:Tacrolimus conversion in kidney transplant recipients: analysis of 107 patients. 1501 27
The immunosuppressants tacrolimus (
FK506
) and cyclosporin A (CsA) have increased the survival rates in organ transplantation. Both drugs inhibit the protein phosphatase calcineurin (CaN) in activated T cells, exhibiting similar side-effects.
Diabetes
is observed more often in
FK506
than CsA therapy, probably due to inhibition of new molecular targets other than CaN. We studied
FK506
toxicity in mammalian cells.
FK506
, but not CsA, regulated p38 activation by osmotic stress, and decreased viability in osmostressed cells. In addition,
FK506
treatment strongly increased the phosphorylation of the eukaryotic initiation factor-2alpha (eIF-2alpha) subunit. eIF-2alpha phosphorylation, p38 inhibition and cell lethality were relieved by addition of excess amino acids to the medium, suggesting that amino acid availability mediated
FK506
toxicity. Therefore, these
FK506
-dependent responses could be relevant to the non-therapeutic effects of
FK506
therapy.
...
PMID:FK506 sensitizes mammalian cells to high osmolarity by modulating p38 MAP kinase activation. 1505 12
For many years new-onset
diabetes
after transplantation has been recognized as a complication of solid-organ transplantation, although its importance has been greatly underestimated. Studies have shown that the cumulative incidence of this condition in heart transplant recipients may reach 32% at 5 years, similar to that reported in kidney and liver transplant patients. Several factors predispose to increased risk for developing new-onset
diabetes
after transplantation, including age, ethnicity, family history of
diabetes
, obesity and immunosuppressive therapy. Corticosteroids are associated with the greatest risk of developing the condition.
Tacrolimus
is more diabetogenic than cyclosporine in kidney and liver transplant patients, but there are few data reporting the effects of these agents in heart transplant patients. In kidney transplant patients,
diabetes
is known to be a significant risk factor for cardiovascular disease post-transplant. Although this has yet to be demonstrated clearly in heart transplant patients, evidence suggests that new-onset
diabetes
after transplantation may play a role in the development of cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV). Because CAV is the major limitation to long-term survival in this population, it is clear that efforts should be made to reduce the risk of
diabetes
and treat this condition appropriately. Management of transplant recipients with new-onset
diabetes
after transplantation has been assisted by the recent publication of International Consensus Guidelines. The guidelines were developed to establish a standard definition and describe risk factors for new-onset
diabetes
after transplantation. Use of these guidelines will help to prospectively identify those at risk of developing new-onset
diabetes
after transplantation so that therapeutic strategies can be individualized early in the treatment regimen. These management approaches should help to lower the risk of new-onset
diabetes
after heart transplantation and reduce the possible long-term consequences of the condition.
...
PMID:New-onset diabetes after transplantation. 1509 5
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