• Title of article

    Effect of Age on Conversion to Everolimus with Calcineurin Inhibitor Minimization at A Late Post-Transplant Stage

  • Author/Authors

    uchida, junji osaka city university - graduate school of medicine - department of urology, Osaka, Japan , nishide, shunji osaka city university - graduate school of medicine - department of urology, Osaka, Japan , kabei, kazuya osaka city university - graduate school of medicine - department of urology, Osaka, Japan , shimada, hisao osaka city university - graduate school of medicine - department of urology, Osaka, Japan , kosoku, akihiro osaka city university - graduate school of medicine - department of urology, Osaka, Japan , iwai, tomoaki osaka city university - graduate school of medicine - department of urology, Osaka, Japan , kuwabara, nobuyuki osaka city university - graduate school of medicine - department of urology, Osaka, Japan , naganuma, toshihide department of urology - graduate school of medicine - osaka city university, Osaka, Japan , kumada, norihiko suita municipal hospital - department of urology, Suita, Japan , takemoto, yoshiaki osaka city university - graduate school of medicine - department of urology, Osaka, Japan , nakatani, tatsuya osaka city university - graduate school of medicine - department of urology, Osaka, Japan

  • From page
    266
  • To page
    271
  • Abstract
    Purpose: The purpose of this study was to identify the risk factors for everolimus discontinuation in kidney transplant recipients converted to everolimus with calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) minimization at a late post- transplant stage. Materials and Methods: An observational retrospective cohort study was conducted on a total of 38 recipients of kidney transplantation at our institution from June 2012 to March 2015 who were converted from antimetabolites to everolimus at a late post-transplant stage and followed for 1 year. We divided the patients into two groups to evaluate the factors affecting everolimus discontinuation after conversion: everolimus continuation group (n = 23), patients in whom everolimus maintained, and everolimus discontinuation group (n = 15), patients in whom everolimus were stopped within 1 year after conversion. Results: Age at conversion was significantly older in the everolimus discontinuation group compared to the everolimus continuation group (57.9 ± 12.0 years in the everolimus discontinuation group vs 45.7 ± 11.2 years in the everolimus continuous group; P = .0062). Multivariate cox proportional hazard regression analysis revealed that age at conversion significantly correlated with everolimus discontinuation (P = .012). Receiver operating characteristic curve of age at conversion showed that the cut-off value was 55 years old for the everolimus discontinuation group [area under curve 0.804, 95% confidence interval (0.654-0.954), sensitivity 86.7%, specificity 65.2%]. Conclusion: Our results indicated that late conversion to everolimus with CNI minimization in elderly recipients older than 55 years of age may be associated with more frequent adverse events and discontinuations.
  • Keywords
    age , calcineurin inhibitor minimization , everolimus , immunosuppressive agent , kidney transplantation
  • Journal title
    Urology Journal
  • Journal title
    Urology Journal
  • Record number

    2680187