Abstract

The incidence of myocardial hypertrophy was determined in a comparative study of tacrolimus-based immunosuppression with cyclosporine-based immunosuppression for prevention of acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after unrelated donor bone marrow transplantation. Patients were evaluated for clinical and echocardiographic abnormalities at baseline (prior to pretreatment conditioning and the first dose of study drug) and at 5-8 weeks after transplant when stable levels of oral tacrolimus or cyclosporine had been achieved. Left ventricular geometry and performance were assessed by echocardiography which included 2-D measurements and one Doppler measurement. Derived echocardiographic measurements and left ventricular mass index (LVMI) were also determined. A cut-off of <111 g/m(2) was used for the upper limit of normal for LVMI. Forty-four patients were included in this study (21 tacrolimus and 23 cyclosporine), of which 31 were evaluable for a comparison with both baseline and post-transplant values. There was no significant difference in the changes from baseline for mean left ventricular mass (LVM) or LVM index (LVMI) between treatment groups. Also, within the tacrolimus group there were no significant changes for these variables from baseline to post-transplant evaluations. Within the cyclosporine group there were significant increases from baseline for mean LVM (P = 0.011) and LVMI (P = 0.007). The incidence of myocardial hypertrophy (change of LVMI from <111 g/m(2) baseline to >111 g/m(2) post transplant) was 20% in the tacrolimus group and 56% in the cyclosporine group (P = 0.109). Changes in the LVMI from baseline to post baseline were greater with cyclosporine than with tacrolimus therapy, and there was no evidence that tacrolimus causes myocardial hypertrophy or significant clinical changes in adult bone marrow transplant patients. The increase in LVMI after transplant in the cyclosporine group was greater than in the tacrolimus group but was not associated with any significant clinical events.

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