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The Effects of Conversion From Cyclosporine to Tacrolimus on the Changes of Cardiovascular Risk Profiles and Serum Metabolites in Renal Transplant Recipients

K

Kyungpook National University

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 4

Conditions

CYCLOSPORINE/TACROLIMUS

Treatments

Drug: Tacrolimus

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02496494
KNUH 2012-09-010

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effects of conversion from cyclosporine to tacrolimus on the changes of cardiovascular risk profiles and serum metabolites in renal transplant recipients.

Full description

During the past two decades, cyclosporine has proved to be a valuable immunosuppressive drug that has contributed to a significant reduction in the incidence of acute rejection after kidney transplantation. However, cyclosporine is known as a major factor causing cardiovascular death in kidney transplant recipients. Moreover, cyclosporine has an adverse effect on the lipid profile and fibrinolytic system and result in hypertension and cardiovascular disease. Immunosupressive mechanism of tacrolimus is identical that of cyclosporine but it is 100 times more potent T cell inhibitor than cyclosporine. In multicenter study of Europe and United states, tacrolimus showed low incidence of acute rejection and was known to effective in acute rejection resistant to other therapy. Tacrolimus has a lot of advantages compared to cyclosporine in terms of hypertensive and hyperlipidemic effects although evidences are lacking. One study demonstrated cardiovascular risk profile and renal function has been improved in kidney transplant patients after randomized conversion from cyclosporine to tacrolimus Previous study analyzing metabolites of tacrolimus and cyclosporine revealed that differences were observed in the metabolite level of hypoxanthine, lactate, succinate, and taurine between two immunosupressants. The objective of this study is to evaluate changes in cardiovascular risk profiles and metabolite patterns after conversion from cyclosporine to tacrolimus in kidney transplant recipients.

Enrollment

50 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Patients who received a kidney transplant at least 12 months ago prior to enrollment
  2. Patients who have kept in unchanged cyclosporine therapy at least for 6 months prior to enrollment.
  3. Female patients of childbearing potential must have a negative urine or serum pregnancy test prior to enrollment, and agreed to the deliberate prevention of conception during the trial
  4. Patients who are considered clinically stable by observer's judgment.
  5. Patients must understand the purpose and risk of participating the the trial and signed on the written consent.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Patients who have previously received an organ transplant other than a kidney
  2. Patients diagnosed with congestive heart failure within 6 months (EF <35%)
  3. Patients with untreated ischemic heart disease
  4. Patients whose hemoglobin is in the level of <7.0 g/dL
  5. Patients who have a known hypersensitivity to tacrolimus
  6. Patients taking potassium sparing diuretics
  7. Patients newly diagnosed malignant tumors after organ transplant but the patients treated completely with basal or squamous cell carcinoma of the skin are excepted
  8. Patients who are at the risk of drug abuse or mental disorders or communicate difficulties with the observer
  9. Patients who are pregnant or lactating

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

50 participants in 1 patient group

Tacrolimus conversion group
Experimental group
Description:
Cyclosprine was converted to tacrolimus in kidney transplant recipients.
Treatment:
Drug: Tacrolimus

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Chan-Duck Kim, M.D., PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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