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Clinical Trial
. 2003 Mar 27;75(6):772-80.
doi: 10.1097/00007890-200303270-00008.

The impact of cyclosporine dose reduction with or without the addition of rapamycin on functional, molecular, and histological markers of chronic allograft nephropathy

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

The impact of cyclosporine dose reduction with or without the addition of rapamycin on functional, molecular, and histological markers of chronic allograft nephropathy

R N Saunders et al. Transplantation. .

Abstract

Background: Overexposure to cyclosporine is a risk factor for chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) and dose reduction has been advocated. The purpose of this study was to determine the impact of adding the non-nephrotoxic immunosuppressant, rapamycin, after cyclosporine dose reduction in renal-allograft recipients with CAN.

Methods: Thirty-one patients with biopsy-confirmed CAN were prospectively randomized to receive a 40% cyclosporine dose reduction with (rapamycin, n=16) or without (control, n=15) the addition of rapamycin 2 mg/day. Renal function and side-effect parameters were assessed. Patients had renal allograft biopsies taken at recruitment and after 6 months. Glomeruli were isolated from these and underwent total mRNA extraction followed by RT-PCR-ELISA to assess transforming growth factor-beta1, collagen III, TIMP-1, TIMP-2, and matrix metalloproteinase-2 expression. Samples were also stained with Sirius red and the percentage interstitial volume fraction quantified by computerized histomorphometric analysis. Data are presented as mean (+/-SD).

Results: Patient characteristics and cyclosporine trough levels after dose reduction (rapamycin 68 [+/-21] vs. control 56 [+/-19] ng/mL, P=NS) were similar in both groups. Rapamycin patients had a significant fall in Cr-51 radioisotope glomerular filtration rate (31.6 [+/-8.9] to 27.3 [+/-8.6] mL/min, P<0.01) that was not significant in controls (29.5 [+/-10.4] to 27.0 [+/-8.0] mL/min, P=NS). Transforming growth factor-beta1 expression fell over time in control but remained constant in rapamycin patients. Conversely collagen III expression increased over the 6-month follow-up in rapamycin patients but not in controls. Both had comparable increases in TIMP-1 and matrix metalloproteinase-2 but only rapamycin patients developed a significant increase in TIMP-2. Sirius red-stained interstitial volume fraction fell over the study in controls (15.3-11.2%, P=0.06) but not in rapamycin patients (16.2-16.3%, P=NS).

Conclusion: Rapamycin (2 mg/day) did not improve functional, molecular, or histological outcome in patients with CAN after cyclosporine dose reduction. Further studies involving larger numbers of patients are necessary to confirm these findings.

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