These results indicate that up to 5 mg/day everolimus results in a dose-proportional exposure, and is adequately well tolerated in renal transplant recipients receiving cyclosporin and steroids.
Long-term survival of patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is over 10 years, and such patients are thus potential kidney recipients in the case of superimposed end-stage renal disease. However, the renal and patient outcome in this condition is unknown. We report the charts of four patients with CLL who were engrafted in France with a deceased-donor kidney and underwent routine triple immunosuppressive therapy. The results show that these patients developed severe infectious episodes (fatal in one case) and tumoral complications including rapid progression of CLL in two cases. Moreover, the graft may be infiltrated and damaged by monoclonal B cells: one patient lost his graft 14 months after transplantation. Various therapeutic options (modifications of the immunosuppressive regimen, anti-CD20 antibodies, irradiation of the graft) showed little (if any) efficacy. Therefore, we believe that CLL is a too hazardous condition to envisage solid organ transplantation with a routine immunosuppressive regimen, and we propose a more appropriate approach.
To investigate possible interactions of the novel immunosuppressant everolimus with cyclosporine, a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-escalating phase I study was performed. Everolimus regimens (0.75-10 mg/d) were administered for 28 days to stable renal allograft recipients receiving the microemulsion form of cyclosporine. Steady-state cyclosporine profiles were assessed at baseline on day 0 (cyclosporine alone) and on day 21 with everolimus on steady state. By day 21, mean dose-normalized cyclosporine AUC0-12 increased by 15% in patients receiving placebo. In everolimus-treated patients, mean increases in cyclosporine AUC0-12 ranged from 7% to 43%, which were not significantly different across all dosing cohorts including placebo. Linear regression of everolimus AUC on day 21 versus the increase in cyclosporine AUC0-12 yielded a slope not significantly different from a horizontal line (P = ns). In conclusion, these results suggest that steady-state everolimus exposure over the wide range assessed in this study did not affect steady-state cyclosporine pharmacokinetics.
Human papillomaviruses (HPV) probably play a role in the development of skin cancer in renal transplant recipients. Since some mucosal HPV are strongly related to cervical cancer, we compared the frequency of HPV DNA detection (mucosal types 6/1 I , 16/18, and 31/ 33/51) in skin cancer of renal transplant recipients (21 lesions) with that in normal subjects without immunodeficiency (21 lesions) and studied the frequency of these same HPV in benign lesions of renal transplant recipients (34 lesions) and normal subjects (30 lesions). An in situ hybridization technique employing cold biotin probes was used. HPV DNA was not significantly ( P = 0.09.5) more frequent in malignant skin cancer in renal transplant recipients (42.9 %) than in normal subjects (19.04 %), but was significantly more frequent in benign lesions in renal transplant recipients (32.4 YO) than in controls (10 YO; P < 0.0.5). These results on a limited number of skin lesions do not allow one to confirm the predominant role of mucosal HPV in the development of skin cancer in renal transplant recipients. HPV interaction with other factors related to the immunosuppressive state may play a role.
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