Abstract

Abstract All renal allograft recipients (n= 32) in Sweden and Norway who were converted from cy-closporin(CyA)-based immunosuppression to FK 506 (tacrolimus) between October 1992 and June 1995 were analyzed retrospectively. The reasons for conversion were acute refractory rejection (n= 21), chronic rejection (n= 4), and suspected CyA toxicity (n= 6); one patient was converted for psychological reasons. The mean time from transplantation to conversion was 29 (range 1–243) weeks and there was a mean follow-up of 46 (2–143) weeks. Overall graft survival was 59 %, with graft survival 52 % in patients converted because of acute rejection, 50 % in patients converted because of chronic rejection, and 83 % in patients converted because of CyA toxicity. There was no significant correlation between preconversion serum creatinine and outcome. Seventy-two percent of the patients had significant side effects during FK 506 treatment, the most frequent ones being neurological and gastrointestinal symptoms. These improved after dose reduction. Two patients became overimmunosup-pressed and developed lymphoma. One patient died of the primary kidney disease, hemolytic uraemic syndrome. We conclude that FK 506 therapy is able to salvage kidneys with acute refractory rejection and that it is an alternative in patients with CyA toxicity. However, the risk of overimmunosuppression must be considered.

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