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764 result(s) for "Mycophenolic Acid - administration "
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Post-Transplantation Cyclophosphamide-Based Graft-versus-Host Disease Prophylaxis
In this trial, 1-year GVHD-free, relapse-free survival after stem-cell transplantation was 52.7% in the cyclophosphamide–tacrolimus–mycophenolate mofetil group and 34.9% in the tacrolimus–methotrexate group.
Efficacy and Safety of Obinutuzumab in Active Lupus Nephritis
In this trial, obinutuzumab, a humanized type II anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody, plus standard therapy provided significantly better renal responses than standard therapy alone in patients with lupus nephritis.
Short-term progression of interstitial lung disease in systemic sclerosis predicts long-term survival in two independent clinical trial cohorts
ObjectiveTo assess survival and identify predictors of survival in patients with systemic sclerosis-interstitial lung disease (SSc-ILD) who participated in the Scleroderma Lung Studies (SLS) I and II.MethodsSLS I randomised 158 patients with SSc-ILD to 1  year of oral cyclophosphamide (CYC) vs placebo. SLS II randomised 142 patients to 1 year of oral CYC followed by 1 year of placebo vs 2 years of mycophenolate mofetil. Counting process Cox proportional hazard modelling identified variables associated with long-term mortality in SLS I and II. Internal validation was performed using joint modelling.ResultsAfter a median follow-up of 8 years, 42% of SLS I patients died, and when known the cause of death was most often attributable to SSc. There was no significant difference in the time to death between treatment arms in SLS I or II. Higher baseline skin score, older age, and a decline in the forced vital capacity (FVC) and the diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide (DLCO) over 2 years were independently associated with an increased risk of mortality in SLS I. The Cox model identified the same mortality predictor variables using the SLS II data.ConclusionIn addition to identifying traditional mortality risk factors in SSc (skin score, age), this study demonstrated that a decline in FVC and DLCO over 2 years was a better predictor of mortality than baseline FVC and DLCO. These findings suggest that short-term changes in surrogate measures of SSc-ILD progression may have important effects on long-term outcomes.
Clinical trial of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in children and young adults
This NIH-funded multicenter randomized study of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) treatment compared the efficacy of a 12-month course of cyclosporine to a combination of oral pulse dexamethasone and mycophenolate mofetil in children and adults with steroid-resistant primary FSGS. Of the 192 patients enrolled, 138 were randomized to cyclosporine (72) or to mycophenolate/dexamethasone (66). The primary analysis compared the levels of an ordinal variable measuring remission during the first year. The odds ratio (0.59) for achieving at least a partial remission with mycophenolate/dexamethasone compared to cyclosporine was not significant. Partial or complete remission was achieved in 22 mycophenolate/dexamethasone- and 33 cyclosporine-treated patients at 12 months. The main secondary outcome, preservation of remission for 26 weeks following cessation of treatment, was not significantly different between these two therapies. During the entire 78 weeks of study, 8 patients treated with cyclosporine and 7 with mycophenolate/dexamethasone died or developed kidney failure. Thus, our study did not find a difference in rates of proteinuria remission following 12 months of cyclosporine compared to mycophenolate/dexamethasone in patients with steroid-resistant FSGS. However, the small sample size might have prevented detection of a moderate treatment effect.
Reduced Exposure to Calcineurin Inhibitors in Renal Transplantation
This study examines the toxicity of immunosuppressive regimens in renal-transplant recipients. A regimen containing mycophenolate mofetil, daclizumab, low-dose tacrolimus, and corticosteroids appeared to be the most effective with respect to the glomerular filtration rate, allograft survival, and acute rejection, as compared with regimens containing dacluzimab induction plus either low-dose cyclosporine or low-dose sirolimus and with standard-dose cyclosporine without induction. A regimen containing mycophenolate mofetil, daclizumab, low-dose tacrolimus, and corticosteroids appeared to be the most effective with respect to the glomerular filtration rate, allograft survival, and acute rejection. Despite improved short-term outcome in renal transplantation, 3 to 5% of allografts per year are still lost; the leading causes are long-term allograft nephropathy and death with a functioning allograft. 1 As patients have fewer acute rejection episodes, adverse events associated with long-term immunosuppression have become increasingly evident. Accordingly, reducing the toxic effects of immunosuppressive regimens has become a major goal in the treatment of transplant recipients. Cyclosporine, a calcineurin inhibitor in use for many years, is still the basis of many immunosuppressive regimens because of its clinical success. However, standard recommended doses are associated with nephrotoxicity, resulting in long-term renal . . .
Mycophenolate mofetil-based immunosuppression with sirolimus in renal transplantation: a randomized, controlled Spare-the-Nephron trial
As part of the Spare-the-Nephron trial, we evaluated the combination mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) and sirolimus (SRL) as a calcineurin inhibitor (CNI)-free regimen for the preservation of renal function in renal allograft recipients. This 2-year, open-label, multicenter trial randomized 299 patients of which 151 were maintained on MMF and a CNI, 148 on MMF plus SRL (n=120, tacrolimus; n=31, cyclosporine). Baseline characteristics including measured (iothalamate) glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were similar between groups. After 1 year, the mean percentage change from baseline in the primary end point of measured GFR was significantly higher in the MMF/SRL group compared with the MMF/CNI group. After 2 years, the change was indistinguishable. Calculated creatinine clearance and GFR were significantly greater with MMF/SRL at 2 years within which biopsy-proven acute rejection (BPAR) occurred in 14 MMF/SRL-treated patients (3 graft losses) and in 17 receiving the MMF/CNI (6 graft losses). Significantly, no patients receiving MMF/SRL but five treated with MMF/CNI died. Thus, compared with MMF/CNI treatment, a 2-year regimen of MMF/SRL resulted in similar measures of renal function but with fewer deaths and a trend to less BPAR and graft loss.
Treating Pemphigus Vulgaris with Prednisone and Mycophenolate Mofetil: A Multicenter, Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial
Non-blinded trials of pemphigus vulgaris suggest that mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) may be beneficial. In a prospective, multicenter trial, outpatients with mild or moderate pemphigus vulgaris were randomized to MMF (2 or 3gday−1) plus oral corticosteroids or placebo plus oral corticosteroids for 52 weeks. The primary end point was the proportion of patients in the placebo and combined MMF groups responding to treatment (absence of new, persistent oral or cutaneous lesions, and prednisone dose ≤10mgday−1 from weeks 48 to 52). Of 96 randomized patients, 94 were given treatment and 75 completed the study. Treatment responses occurred in 40 of 58 patients (69.0%) in the combined MMF group and 23 of 36 (63.9%) in the placebo group (P=0.6558, 95% confidence interval –17.4 to 27.6). MMF-treated patients showed faster and more durable responses. In post hoc analyses, more patients taking MMF showed sustained responses for 3 or 6 months than did placebo patients. MMF was well tolerated. Although MMF did not show an advantage on the primary end point, there seemed to be a beneficial treatment effect on several secondary end points, including time to response and duration of response. Thus, MMF may be a potentially useful agent in patients with mild or moderate pemphigus vulgaris. JID JOURNAL CLUB ARTICLE: For questions, answers, and open discussion about this article please go to
Mycophenolate mofetil and intravenous cyclophosphamide are similar as induction therapy for class V lupus nephritis
Class V lupus nephritis (LN) occurs in one-fifth of biopsy-proven cases of systemic lupus erythematosus. To study the effectiveness of treatments in this group of patients, we pooled analysis of two large randomized controlled multicenter trials of patients with diverse ethnic and racial background who had pure class V disease. These patients received mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) or intravenous cyclophosphamide (IVC) as induction therapy for 24 weeks, with percentage change in proteinuria and serum creatinine as end points. Weighted mean differences, pooled odds ratios, and confidence intervals were calculated by using a random-effects model. A total of 84 patients with class V disease were divided into equal groups, each group had comparable entry variables but one received MMF and one received IVC. Within these groups, 33 patients on MMF and 32 patients on IVC completed 24 weeks of treatment. There were no differences between the groups in mean values for the measured end points. Similarly, no difference was found regarding the number of patients who did not complete the study or who died. In patients with nephrotic syndrome, no difference was noted between those treated with MMF and IVC regarding partial remission or change in urine protein. Hence we found that the response to MMF as induction treatment of patients with class V LN appears to be no different from that to IVC.
Everolimus-based, calcineurin-inhibitor-free regimen in recipients of de-novo kidney transplants: an open-label, randomised, controlled trial
Non-nephrotoxic immunosuppressive strategies that allow reduction of calcineurin-inhibitor exposure without compromising safety or efficacy remain a goal in kidney transplantation. Immunosuppression based on the mammalian-target-of-rapamycin inhibitor everolimus was assessed as a strategy for elimination of calcineurin-inhibitor exposure and optimisation of renal-graft function while maintaining efficacy. In the ZEUS multicentre, open-label study, 503 patients (aged 18–65 years) who had received de-novo kidney transplants were enrolled. After initial treatment with ciclosporin, based on trough concentrations, and enteric-coated mycophenolate sodium (1440 mg/day, orally), corticosteroids (≥5 mg/day prednisolone or equivalent, orally), and basiliximab induction (20 mg, intravenously, on day 0 [2 h before transplantation], and on day 4), 300 (60%) patients were randomly assigned at 4·5 months in a 1:1 ratio to undergo calcineurin-inhibitor elimination (everolimus-based regimen that was based on trough concentrations [6–10 ng/mL] and enteric-coated mycophenolate sodium [1440 mg/day] with corticosteroids), or continue standard ciclosporin-based treatment. Randomisation was done by use of a central, validated system that automated the random assignment of treatment groups to randomisation numbers. The primary objective was to show better renal function (glomerular filtration rate [GFR]; Nankivell formula) with the calcineurin-inhibitor-free everolimus regimen at 12 months after transplantation. Analysis was by intention to treat. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00154310. 118 (76%) of 155 everolimus-treated patients and 117 (81%) of 145 ciclosporin-treated patients completed treatment with study drug up to 12 months after transplantation. At this timepoint, the everolimus regimen was associated with a significant improvement in GFR versus the ciclosporin regimen (71·8 mL/min per 1·73 m2vs 61·9 mL/min per 1·73 m2, respectively; mean difference 9·8 mL/min per 1·73 m2, 95% CI −12·2 to −7·5). Rates of biopsy-proven acute rejection were higher in the everolimus group than in the ciclosporin group after randomisation (15 [10%] of 154 vs five [3%] of 146; p=0·036), but similar for the full study period (23 [15%] vs 22 [15%]). Compared with the ciclosporin regimen, higher mean lipid concentrations, slightly increased urinary protein excretion, and lower haemoglobin concentrations were noted with the everolimus regimen; thrombocytopenia, aphthous stomatitis, and diarrhoea also occurred more often in the everolimus group. A higher incidence of hyperuricaemia was noted with ciclosporin. Early elimination of calcineurin inhibitor by use of everolimus-based immunosuppression improved renal function at 12 months while maintaining efficacy and safety, indicating that this strategy may facilitate improved long-term outcomes in selected patients. Novartis Pharma.
Pharmacokinetics and Bioequivalence of Mycophenolate Sodium Enteric-Coated Tablets Under Fasting and Fed Conditions: A Single-Dose, Open-Label, Four-Period Replicated Crossover Study in Healthy Chinese Male Subjects
Enteric-coated mycophenolate sodium (EC-MPS) is an immunosuppressant used to prevent organ rejection in kidney transplant patients. This study assesses the pharmacokinetics and bioequivalence of a generic EC-MPS formulation (180 mg) relative to the branded product (Myfortic ), and investigates the effect of food on its pharmacokinetic behavior. A single-dose, open-label, four-period replicated crossover study with a 7-day washout was conducted in 60 healthy Chinese male subjects under fasting and fed conditions. Eligible subjects were enrolled in two independent trials (fasting and fed conditions) and randomized 1:1 into two treatment sequence groups, with 15 subjects per group. In each group, subjects received a single 180 mg oral dose of the generic or branded product after a 10-hours overnight fast. Plasma concentrations of mycophenolic acid were quantified using a validated LC-MS/MS method. Primary pharmacokinetic parameters (C , AUC , and AUC ) were evaluated via a non-compartmental model and analyzed by analysis of variance. Bioequivalence was determined using reference-scaled average bioequivalence (RSABE) for highly variable parameters (CV ≥30%) and average bioequivalence (ABE) otherwise, with 90% confidence intervals (CIs) within 80.00%-125.00%. All subjects completed the study. Bioequivalence was established between the generic and branded formulations under both fasting and fed conditions. In the fasting cohort, 90% CIs for the geometric mean ratios (GMRs) of C , AUC , and AUC all fell within 80.00%-125.00%, meeting ABE criteria. In the fed cohort, GMRs for C and AUC were 119.74% and 99.87%, respectively, within RSABE acceptance limits. Food intake delayed drug absorption, resulting in a notable lag time (median T 7.0 h vs 2.5-3.0 h, p<0.01) and increased inter- and intra-individual variability. Twenty mild adverse events (AEs) were reported; no serious AEs occurred. The generic EC-MPS demonstrated bioequivalence to the branded product under all tested conditions, supporting its clinical interchangeability. Both formulations were well tolerated in healthy Chinese males. http://www.chictr.org.cn/, Registration No: ChiCTR2300075403.