Abstract

The present study evaluated whether the addition of sirolimus to a cyclosporine (CyA)/prednisone (Pred) regimen mitigated the greater proclivity to acute rejection episodes and graft loss characteristic of African-American renal transplant recipients. Using Kaplan-Meier and log-rank tests, African-American renal transplant recipients treated with either CyA/Pred (n = 90) or sirolimus/CyA/Pred (n = 47) were compared with 120 Caucasian patients treated with sirolimus/CyA/Pred for 2-year rates of patient and graft survival as well as acute rejection episodes. Mean laboratory values were compared using analysis of variance and F-tests. Addition of sirolimus to the CyA/Pred regimen reduced the incidence of acute rejection episodes in African-Americans from 43.3% to 19.2% (P = 0.004), a value similar to Caucasian patients. The 97.9% 2-year graft survival rate among 47 African-American patients treated with sirolimus/CyA/Pred was significantly higher than the 85.6% rate shown among the 90 CyA/Pred-treated African-American transplant recipients (P = 0.0479) and similar to that in Caucasians. The 95.7% patient survival rate among the African-American sirolimus/CyA/Pred group was similar to the 97.8% rate in the African-American CyA/Pred cohort. Interestingly, there was no evident toxicity from the addition of sirolimus. The addition of sirolimus to a CyA-based regimen reduced acute rejection episodes and graft loss experienced by African-American renal transplant recipients.

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