Excellent efficacy and beneficial safety during observational 5-year follow-up of rapid steroid withdrawal after renal transplantation (Harmony FU study)

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Julian Stumpf - , Department of internal Medicine 3, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus Dresden (Author)
  • Oliver Thomusch - , University of Freiburg (Author)
  • Mirian Opgenoorth - , State Vocational Colleges at the University Hospital Erlangen (Author)
  • Michael Wiesener - , State Vocational Colleges at the University Hospital Erlangen (Author)
  • Andreas Pascher - , University Hospital Münster (Author)
  • Rainer Peter Woitas - , University of Bonn Medical Center (Author)
  • Barbara Suwelack - , University Hospital Münster (Author)
  • Markus Rentsch - , Hospital of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University (LMU) Munich (Author)
  • Oliver Witzke - , University Hospital Essen (Author)
  • Thomas Rath - , Westpfalz-Klinikum GmbH (Author)
  • Bernhard Banas - , University Hospital Regensburg (Author)
  • Urs Benck - , SRH University Heidelberg (Author)
  • Claudia Sommerer - , National Center for Tumor Diseases (NCT) Heidelberg (Author)
  • Christine Kurschat - , Uniklinik Köln (Author)
  • Kai Lopau - , Basurto University Hospital (Author)
  • Julia Weinmann-Menke - , University Medical Center Mainz (Author)
  • Bernd Jaenigen - , University of Freiburg (Author)
  • Evelyn Trips - , Coordination Centre for Clinical Studies Dresden (KKS-DD) (Author)
  • Christian Hugo - , Department of internal Medicine 3, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus Dresden (Author)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We previously reported excellent efficacy and improved safety aspects of rapid steroid withdrawal in the randomized controlled one year 'Harmony' trial with 587 predominantly deceased-donor kidney transplant recipients randomized either to basiliximab or rabbit antithymocyte globulin induction therapy and compared to standard immunosuppressive therapy consisting of basiliximab, low tacrolimus once daily, mycophenolate mofetil, and corticosteroids.

METHODS: The five-year post-trial follow-up data were obtained in an observational manner at a three and a five-year visit only for those Harmony patients who consented to participate and covered clinical events that occurred from the second year onwards.

RESULTS: Biopsy-proven acute rejection and death-censored graft loss rates remained low and independent of rapid steroid withdrawal. Rapid steroid withdrawal was an independent positive factor for patient survival (adjusted hazard ratio 0.554, 95% confidence interval 0.314 to 0.976; P = 0.041).The reduced incidence of post-transplantation diabetes mellitus in rapid steroid withdrawal patients during the original one-year study period was not compensated by later incidences during follow-up. Incidences of other important outcome parameters such as opportunistic infections, malignancies, cardiovascular morbidity/risk factors, donor specific antibody formation, or kidney function did not differ during follow-up period.

CONCLUSIONS: With all limitations of a post-trial follow up study, the Harmony follow-up data confirms excellent efficacy and beneficial safety aspects of rapid steroid withdrawal under modern immunosuppressive therapy over the course of 5 years after kidney transplantation in an immunologically low-risk, elderly population of Caucasian kidney transplant recipients.(Clinical trial registration number: Investigator Initiated Trial (NCT00724022, follow-up study DRKS00005786).

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)141-150
Number of pages10
JournalNephrology Dialysis Transplantation
Volume39
Issue number1
Early online date30 Jun 2023
Publication statusPublished - 20 Dec 2023
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

ORCID /0000-0002-6530-5855/work/146646279
Scopus 85180401296
unpaywall 10.1093/ndt/gfad130
Mendeley bb61df20-1609-338c-9c81-9d948193b13f

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • Graft Rejection/drug therapy, Kidney Transplantation/adverse effects, Follow-Up Studies, Immunosuppressive Agents/adverse effects, Basiliximab, Humans, Mycophenolic Acid/therapeutic use, Graft Survival, Aged, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Tacrolimus/adverse effects, Steroids