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Clinical Trial
. 1998 Aug 27;66(4):493-9.
doi: 10.1097/00007890-199808270-00014.

A long-term comparison of tacrolimus (FK506) versus cyclosporine in liver transplantation: a report of the United States FK506 Study Group

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

A long-term comparison of tacrolimus (FK506) versus cyclosporine in liver transplantation: a report of the United States FK506 Study Group

R H Wiesner. Transplantation. .

Abstract

Background: The long-term (5 year) efficacy and safety of tacrolimus (FK506) and cyclosporine were compared in primary liver transplant recipients who participated in a 1-year randomized, multicenter trial and a 4-year follow-up extension study.

Methods: A total of 529 patients (263 tacrolimus group, 266 cyclosporine group) were randomized to study drug. Patients were evaluated at 3-month intervals. Patient and graft survival rates, incidence of adverse events, and changes in laboratory and clinical profiles were determined.

Results: Cumulative 5-year patient and graft survival rates were comparable for the tacrolimus (79.0%, 71.8%) and cyclosporine (73.1%, 66.4%) groups. However, patient half-life survival was longer for tacrolimus-treated patients (25.1+/-5.1 years versus 15.2+/-2.5 years; P=0.049). Improved patient survival with tacrolimus was also observed for hepatitis C-positive patients (78.9% tacrolimus group versus 60.5% cyclosporine group; P=0.041). Both treatments were associated with a low incidence of late acute rejection, late steroid-resistant rejection, and death or graft loss related to rejection. Both treatments demonstrated an acceptable safety profile with maintenance of adequate renal and liver function and a low incidence of malignancy/lymphoproliferative disease and serious infections.

Conclusions: Tacrolimus is a safe and effective long-term maintenance immunosuppressive agent in primary liver transplantation.

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