Abstract

Renal impairment and high model of end-stage liver disease scores before liver transplantation (LT) are increasingly common. This was a single-arm, 2-step prospective trial of bottom-up calcineurin inhibitor (CNI)-free de novo immunosuppressive treatment (mycofenolate mofetil, steroids, basiliximab) with delayed introduction of sirolimus in patients with renal impairment. Primary endpoint was immunologic safety assessed by the incidence of steroid-resistant rejection within the first 30 days after liver transplantation. Twenty-seven patients were included with a median age of 56 years and labMELD of 28. Baseline glomerular filtration rate was 38 (Cockroft-Gault) and 24 mL/min (modification of diet in renal disease). No steroid-resistant rejections occurred within 30 days. Incidence of biopsy proven acute rejection was 18.5%. Sirolimus was started on day 10 (range, day 1 to day 48). The rate switched to CNI treatment by 1 year was 44%; 1-year overall survival was 93%. Renal function improved significantly, reflected by a Δglomerular filtration rate of 31 mL/min from baseline to 1 year (P = 0.006). Per protocol analysis revealed freedom from CNI, but not presence of sirolimus within the first 30 days, as critical for renal recovery. Initial de novo CNI-free immunosuppressive bottom-up treatment is safe in selected patient groups. The critical period for relevant recovery of renal function seems to be the early period (first 30 days), independent from presence of sirolimus.

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