Kidney transplantation with rabbit antithymocyte globulin induction and sirolimus monotherapy
- PMID: 12457792
- DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(02)11606-0
Kidney transplantation with rabbit antithymocyte globulin induction and sirolimus monotherapy
Abstract
Renal allograft recipients generally need to take several immunosuppressive agents for life. Calcineurin inhibitors and glucocorticosteroids are the mainstays of most regimens but have undesirable chronic effects. We postulated that aggressive T-cell depletion combined with the newer immunosuppressant sirolimus would permit transplantation without multidrug treatment. We therefore tested T-cell depletion with rabbit antithymocyte globulin followed by sirolimus monotherapy in 12 patients in an open-label study. This approach was tolerated well, and all patients achieved excellent renal function, and most did not need chronic steroid treatment or calcineurin inhibitors. Rejection was typically correlated with low concentrations of sirolimus, indicating continued dependence on maintenance immunosuppression.
Comment in
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Kidney transplantation with rabbit antithymocyte globulin and sirolimus monotherapy.Lancet. 2003 Mar 15;361(9361):969; author reply 969-70. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(03)12752-3. Lancet. 2003. PMID: 12648994 No abstract available.
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