The role of anti-IL-2 receptor in high-risk kidney transplant patients

Anti-IL-2 receptor has been proved to be effective in reducing the rate of acute rejection in kidney transplantation and also improving both the rate of graft and patient survival. In this study, we retrospectively review the role of anti-IL-2 receptor as induction immunosuppression in immunological...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S. Jirasiritham, V. Sumethkul, V. Mavichak, P. Lertsithichai
Other Authors: Mahidol University
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/21573
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Mahidol University
id th-mahidol.21573
record_format dspace
spelling th-mahidol.215732018-07-24T10:49:15Z The role of anti-IL-2 receptor in high-risk kidney transplant patients S. Jirasiritham V. Sumethkul V. Mavichak P. Lertsithichai S. Jirasiritham Mahidol University Praram 9 Hospital Faculty of Medicine, Ramathibodi Hospital, Mahidol University Medicine Anti-IL-2 receptor has been proved to be effective in reducing the rate of acute rejection in kidney transplantation and also improving both the rate of graft and patient survival. In this study, we retrospectively review the role of anti-IL-2 receptor as induction immunosuppression in immunologically high-risk kidney transplant patient compared with normally low-risk patients. From January 1999 to December 2002, we performed 246 kidney transplantations in two transplant centers in Bangkok. These were divided into two groups: group 1, high-risk group containing 50 patients who had one of the following criteria: (1) high panel reactive antibody (>50%); (2) retransplantation; (3) marginal donor (with expectancy of delayed graft function); (4) spouse donor; (5) >4 HLA mismatch. All group 1 patients receive anti-IL-2 receptor as induction immunosuppression (either Basiliximab (n = 27) or Daclizumab (n = 23).) Group 2 consisted of the control group of 196 patients with normal immunological risk. The following data of both groups were collected and analyzed: patient demography, type of donor, acute rejection incidence, severity, and time. In this study, the anti-IL-2 receptors are 27 cases of Basiliximab and 23 cases of Daclizumab. The rates of acute rejection are not significantly different in both groups, namely, 46 of 194 (23.7%) in group 2 compared with 10 of 50 (20%) episodes in group 1 (P =. 602). All rejections in both groups responded to pulse steroid treatment. The mortality rate and rate of graft failure were also not significantly different, i.e., 6 of 196 (3.1%) vs 2 of 50 (4.0%) (P =. 666) and 7 of 196 (3.6%) vs 3 of 50 (6.0%) (P =. 429) in low risk group versus high risk group, respectively. Kaplan-Meier estimates of the probabilities of acute rejection free, patient survival rate, and graft survival rate also showed no difference between groups. The use of anti-IL-2 receptor antibodies as induction immunosuppression in immunologically high-risk patients results in the same rate of acute rejection, severity of acute rejection, graft survival, and patient survival as recipients with normal immunological risk. 2018-07-24T03:49:15Z 2018-07-24T03:49:15Z 2004-09-01 Conference Paper Transplantation Proceedings. Vol.36, No.7 (2004), 2110-2112 10.1016/j.transproceed.2004.08.088 00411345 2-s2.0-7044249273 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/21573 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=7044249273&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
S. Jirasiritham
V. Sumethkul
V. Mavichak
P. Lertsithichai
S. Jirasiritham
The role of anti-IL-2 receptor in high-risk kidney transplant patients
description Anti-IL-2 receptor has been proved to be effective in reducing the rate of acute rejection in kidney transplantation and also improving both the rate of graft and patient survival. In this study, we retrospectively review the role of anti-IL-2 receptor as induction immunosuppression in immunologically high-risk kidney transplant patient compared with normally low-risk patients. From January 1999 to December 2002, we performed 246 kidney transplantations in two transplant centers in Bangkok. These were divided into two groups: group 1, high-risk group containing 50 patients who had one of the following criteria: (1) high panel reactive antibody (>50%); (2) retransplantation; (3) marginal donor (with expectancy of delayed graft function); (4) spouse donor; (5) >4 HLA mismatch. All group 1 patients receive anti-IL-2 receptor as induction immunosuppression (either Basiliximab (n = 27) or Daclizumab (n = 23).) Group 2 consisted of the control group of 196 patients with normal immunological risk. The following data of both groups were collected and analyzed: patient demography, type of donor, acute rejection incidence, severity, and time. In this study, the anti-IL-2 receptors are 27 cases of Basiliximab and 23 cases of Daclizumab. The rates of acute rejection are not significantly different in both groups, namely, 46 of 194 (23.7%) in group 2 compared with 10 of 50 (20%) episodes in group 1 (P =. 602). All rejections in both groups responded to pulse steroid treatment. The mortality rate and rate of graft failure were also not significantly different, i.e., 6 of 196 (3.1%) vs 2 of 50 (4.0%) (P =. 666) and 7 of 196 (3.6%) vs 3 of 50 (6.0%) (P =. 429) in low risk group versus high risk group, respectively. Kaplan-Meier estimates of the probabilities of acute rejection free, patient survival rate, and graft survival rate also showed no difference between groups. The use of anti-IL-2 receptor antibodies as induction immunosuppression in immunologically high-risk patients results in the same rate of acute rejection, severity of acute rejection, graft survival, and patient survival as recipients with normal immunological risk.
author2 Mahidol University
author_facet Mahidol University
S. Jirasiritham
V. Sumethkul
V. Mavichak
P. Lertsithichai
S. Jirasiritham
format Conference or Workshop Item
author S. Jirasiritham
V. Sumethkul
V. Mavichak
P. Lertsithichai
S. Jirasiritham
author_sort S. Jirasiritham
title The role of anti-IL-2 receptor in high-risk kidney transplant patients
title_short The role of anti-IL-2 receptor in high-risk kidney transplant patients
title_full The role of anti-IL-2 receptor in high-risk kidney transplant patients
title_fullStr The role of anti-IL-2 receptor in high-risk kidney transplant patients
title_full_unstemmed The role of anti-IL-2 receptor in high-risk kidney transplant patients
title_sort role of anti-il-2 receptor in high-risk kidney transplant patients
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/21573
_version_ 1763488819360825344