ObjectivesGiven the positive impact of appropriate medication management on graft outcome and therefore of patient survival and graft function, the pharmacist’s role in the kidney transplantation team has evolved over recent decades. The primary objective of this study was to determine whether pharmacist-led intervention after kidney transplantation is associated with a lower graft rejection rate and intra-patient variation in tacrolimus trough concentrations (Cmin). The study’s secondary objective was to develop a questionnaire to identify patients at risk for highly variable Cmin.MethodsWe retrospectively analysed kidney transplant recipients at Rennes University Hospital (France) between January 2013 and December 2020. Patients who received pharmacist-led education (intervention group, n=139) were compared with patients who did not (control group, n=131), according to graft survival at 1 year post-transplant, coefficient of variation (%CV) for the tacrolimus Cmin, age, sex, length of hospital stay post-transplantation, body mass index, and Charlson Comorbidity Index. In the intervention group, a questionnaire assessing patient knowledge was introduced to compare scores with the %CV.ResultsIn the intervention group, 1 year post-transplant graft survival was higher (95.7% vs 88.5%, p=0.0289) and patients had fewer variabilities in Cmin. The %CV was correlated with questionnaire scores (r=−0.9758, p<0.0001).ConclusionsPharmacist-led interventions may have contributed to improved graft survival and patient management of immunosuppressants. Because %CV correlates with the patient questionnaire score, its introduction could be useful in identifying kidney transplant patients who would benefit most from a pharmacist-led patient education.
best compromise found was a 10% amitriptyline cream made in Versatile with urea at 2% as an emollient agent. This cream retains its diffusion properties, its organoleptic characteristics but also its physicochemical and microbiological stability for more than 6 months (stability data are still ongoing) in a PVC/ALU packaging.81 patients were included (February-November 2020). For 49 patients (60.5%), the cream was effective. The etiologies for which the cream seems to be the most effective are postchemotherapy pain (64% efficiency with taxane-based chemotherapy, 70% efficiency with platinum-based chemotherapy). Conclusion and relevanceThe development of this topical has allowed neuropathic patients to gain relief. These data are very encouraging and will be confirmed through the implementation of a clinical trial.
ObjectivesEvaluate health literacy in transplant patients to better tailor the content of their continuing therapeutic education.MethodsA 20-item questionnaire divided into five themes (sport/recreation, dietary measures, hygiene measures, recognition of the signs of graft rejection and medication management) was sent to transplant patient associations. Participants' responses (a score out of 20 points), were analysed according to demographic characteristics, transplanted organ (kidney, liver or heart), type of donor (living or deceased), participation in a therapeutic patient education (TPE) programme, management of end-stage renal disease (with or without dialysis) and the date of transplant.Results327 individuals completed the questionnaires (mean age 63.3±12.7 years, mean time post-transplant 13.1±12.1 years). From 2 years after transplantation, the patients' score decreases significantly compared with the score obtained at hospital discharge. Patients who received TPE had significantly higher scores than patients who did not receive it, but only in the first 2 years post-transplant. The scores were different depending on the organs transplanted. Patients' knowledge varied according to the theme; the percentage of errors being higher for questions related to hygienic and dietary rules.ConclusionThese findings highlight the importance of the role of the clinical pharmacist in maintaining the transplant recipient’s health literacy level over time to increase graft life. We show the topics on which pharmacists must acquire solid knowledge to best meet the needs of transplant patients.
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