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Efficacy and Safety of Everolimus With Reduced Tacrolimus in Liver Transplant Recipients: 24-month Results From the Pooled Analysis of 2 Randomized Controlled Trials

Sung‐Gyu Lee, Long‐Bin Jeng, Faouzi Saliba, Arvinder S. Soin, Wei‐Chen Lee, Paolo De Simone, Frederik Nevens, Kyung‐Suk Suh, Lutz Fischer, Dong Jin Joo, John J. Fung, Jae‐Won Joh, Toshimi Kaido, David Grant, Matthias Meier, Barbara Rauer, C. Sips, Shuhei Kaneko, Gary Levy

2020Transplantation45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND METHODS: Data from 2 randomized liver transplant trials (N = 772; H2304 [deceased donor, n = 488], H2307 [living donor, n = 284]) were pooled to further evaluate the efficacy and safety of everolimus with reduced tacrolimus (EVR + rTAC) versus standard tacrolimus (sTAC) regimen at month 24. RESULTS: EVR + rTAC was comparable to sTAC for composite efficacy failure of treated biopsy-proven acute rejection, graft loss, or death (9.8% versus 10.8%; difference, -1.0%; 95% confidence interval, -5.4 to 3.4; P = 0.641) at month 24. EVR + rTAC was superior to sTAC for the mean change in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) from randomization to month 24 (-8.37 versus -13.40 mL/min/1.73 m2; P = 0.001). A subanalysis of renal function by chronic kidney disease (CKD) stage at randomization showed significantly lower decline in eGFR from randomization to month 24 for patients with CKD stage 1/2 (eGFR ≥ 60 mL/min/1.73 m2) in EVR + rTAC group versus sTAC (-12.82 versus -17.67 mL/min/1.73 m2, P = 0.009). In patients transplanted for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) beyond Milan criteria, HCC recurrence was numerically lower although not statistically significant with EVR + rTAC versus sTAC group (5.9% [1 of 17] versus 23.1% [6 of 26], P = 0.215), while comparable in patients within Milan criteria (2.9% [3 of 102] versus 2.1% [2 of 96], P = 1.000), irrespective of pretransplant alpha-fetoprotein levels. CONCLUSIONS: EVR + rTAC versus sTAC showed comparable efficacy and safety with significantly better renal function, particularly in patients with normal/mildly decreased renal function (CKD stage 1/2) at randomization and a trend toward lower HCC recurrence in patients transplanted with HCC beyond Milan at month 24. Further long-term data would be required to confirm these results.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRenal functionEverolimusTacrolimusInternal medicineRandomizationGastroenterologyUrologyHepatocellular carcinomaConfidence intervalKidney diseaseLiver transplantationRegimenRandomized controlled trialMilan criteriaTransplantationRenal Transplantation Outcomes and TreatmentsOrgan Transplantation Techniques and OutcomesGenetic and Kidney Cyst Diseases
Efficacy and Safety of Everolimus With Reduced Tacrolimus in Liver Transplant Recipients: 24-month Results From the Pooled Analysis of 2 Randomized Controlled Trials | Litcius