Abstract

BackgroundImmunosuppression with calcineurin inhibitors remains the mainstay of treatment after kidney transplantation; however, long-term use of these drugs may be associated with nephrotoxicity. In this regard, the current approach is to optimise available immunosuppressive regimens to reduce the calcineurin inhibitor dose while protecting renal function without affecting the efficacy. The ATHENA study is designed to evaluate renal function in two regimens: an everolimus and reduced calcineurin inhibitor-based regimen versus a standard treatment protocol with mycophenolic acid and tacrolimus in de novo kidney transplant recipients.Method/DesignATHENA is a 12-month, multicentre, open-label, prospective, randomised, parallel-group study in de novo kidney transplant recipients (aged 18 years or older) receiving renal allografts from deceased or living donors. Eligible patients are randomised (1:1:1) prior to transplantation to one of the following three treatment arms: everolimus (starting dose 1.5 mg/day; C0 3–8 ng/mL) with cyclosporine or everolimus (starting dose 3 mg/day; C0 3–8 ng/mL) with tacrolimus or mycophenolic acid (enteric-coated mycophenolate sodium at 1.44 g/day or mycophenolate mofetil at 2 g/day) with tacrolimus; in combination with corticosteroids. All patients receive induction therapy with basiliximab. The primary objective is to demonstrate non-inferiority of renal function (eGFR by the Nankivell formula) in one of the everolimus arms compared with the standard group at month 12 post transplantation. The key secondary objective is to assess the incidence of treatment failure, defined as biopsy-proven acute rejection, graft loss, or death, among the treatment groups. Other objectives include assessment of the individual components of treatment failure, incidence and severity of viral infections, incidence and duration of delayed graft function, incidence of indication biopsies, slow graft function and wound healing complications, and overall safety and tolerability. Exploratory objectives include evaluation of left ventricular hypertrophy assessed by the left ventricular mass index, evolution of human leukocyte antigen and non-human leukocyte antigen antibodies, and a cytomegalovirus substudy.DiscussionAs one of the largest European multicentre kidney transplant studies, ATHENA will determine whether a de novo everolimus-based regimen can preserve renal function versus the standard of care. This study further assesses a number of clinical issues which impact long-term outcomes post transplantation; hence, its results will have a major clinical impact.Trial registrationClinicaltrials.gov: NCT01843348, date of registration – 18 April 2013; EUDRACT number: 2011-005238-21, date of registration – 20 March 2012Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13063-016-1220-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Immunosuppression with calcineurin inhibitors remains the mainstay of treatment after kidney transplantation; long-term use of these drugs may be associated with nephrotoxicity

  • This study further assesses a number of clinical issues which impact long-term outcomes post transplantation; its results will have a major clinical impact

  • Study objectives The primary objective at month 12 post transplantation is to demonstrate non-inferiority in renal function assessed by the glomerular filtration rate (Nankivell formula) [41] in at least one of the everolimus treatment regimens compared with the standard treatment group receiving mycophenolic acid and tacrolimus

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Summary

Discussion

ATHENA is one of the largest European multicentre kidney transplant studies It is the first study evaluating the non-inferiority of renal function as a primary objective in a de novo everolimus-based immunosuppressive protocol, and will determine whether an everolimus-based regimen can preserve renal function versus the current standard of care. The trial explores a regimen of everolimus with reduced-dose cyclosporine while the dose of tacrolimus in the everolimus arm and the standard arm is the same. These unique features will further enable the study to provide a direct comparison between the two arms, which will in turn help in optimising the immunosuppressive protocols. All authors contributed to the review of the protocol and approved the final manuscript

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