Abstract

In two separate pharmacokinetic studies, the drug interaction between immunosuppressive agents was examined in a total of 12 cardiac transplant recipients by conversion of the concomitant immunosuppressant. In six patients under continuous tacrolimus therapy, the concomitant drug azathioprine was converted to everolimus (PK-TAC study). No significant effect on tacrolimus pharmacokinetic parameters was observed. In the second study in which the patients were converted from cyclosporine to tacrolimus under continuous everolimus therapy (PK-EVL study), a significant decrease in everolimus predose concentration (from 4.2 to 2.3 microg/L), maximum concentration (from 9.1 to 5.9 microg/L), and area under the concentration time curve (mean values decreased from 64.2 to 33.7 microg*h/L) was found, indicating a lower everolimus exposure. A pharmacokinetic interaction between cyclosporine and everolimus has been described previously for healthy volunteers after single-dose application and presumably originates from a comparatively greater inhibition of hepatic CYP3A4 or P-glycoprotein efflux transporter with a low-dose cyclosporine regimen. Our results confirm this interaction under clinical conditions and suggest close drug monitoring when converting the calcineurin inhibitor under concomitant mammalian target of rapamycin-inhibitor therapy.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call