Safety and Efficacy of Reduced Prolonged-release Tacrolimus Exposure in de Novo Kidney Transplantation: A Randomized, Open-label, Pilot Study in Asia-OPTIMIZE Study

Young Hoon Kim, Yang Jen Chiang, Sung Joo Kim, Myoung Soo Kim, Sung Bae Park, Sheng Tang Wu, Kazuhiro Horita, Yoshihiro Nakashima, Hongsi Jiang, Duck Jong Han

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background A multicenter, randomized, open-label, parallel group, pilot, 52-week study in Asian countries that assessed the renal function, efficacy, and safety of reduced-exposure versus standard-exposure prolonged-release tacrolimus (PR-T) in adult kidney transplant recipients (KTRs). Methods Posttransplantation, KTRs received PR-T from weeks 0 to 4 (initial dose, 0.2-0.3 mg/kg; target trough level, 6-10 ng/mL). At week 4, KTRs were randomized (1:1) to receive reduced-exposure PR-T (target 4-6 ng/mL, weeks 4-12; 3-5 ng/mL, weeks 12-52) or standard-exposure PR-T (target: 6-10 ng/mL, weeks 4-52). Primary end point: estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) over 52 weeks. Secondary end points (week 52) included creatinine clearance, serum creatinine, graft/patient survival, biopsy-confirmed acute rejection (AR), composite of graft loss/patient death/biopsy-confirmed AR, and steroid-resistant AR. Treatment-emergent adverse events were recorded. Results Sixty-six KTRs received PR-T (reduced-exposure, n = 32; standard-exposure, n = 34) and were analyzed. After per-protocol dose adjustment, mean ± standard deviation tacrolimus trough level was lower with reduced-versus standard-exposure PR-T (week 52, 4.5 ± 1.1 ng/mL vs 8.0 ± 2.2 ng/mL). In the reduced-versus standard-exposure group, eGFR was similar at weeks 8 to 52 (overall least-square mean difference,-2.82; 95% confidence interval,-7.91 to 2.27; P = 0.272). At week 52, there was no significant difference in creatinine clearance (P = 0.375) or serum creatinine (P = 0.547) between groups. All grafts/patients survived, no steroid-resistant AR was reported, and 4 and 3 patients had AR in reduced-and standard-exposure groups, respectively. Drug-related treatment-emergent adverse events were reported in 34.4% and 38.2% of patients, respectively. Conclusions Reducing exposure to PR-T resulted in a clinically acceptable short-term safety profile and was generally as effective as standard tacrolimus exposure for Asian patients.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere340
JournalTransplantation Direct
Volume5
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 1 2019
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Transplantation

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