P.G.P Machado
Federal University of São Paulo
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Transplantation Proceedings | 2003
B.H Hosaka; S.I. Park; Claudia Rosso Felipe; R. Garcia; P.G.P Machado; Aparecido B. Pereira; Helio Tedesco-Silva; Jose O. Medina-Pestana
UNLABELLED High concentrations of retinol binding protein (RBP) are found in the urine of patients with tubulointerstitial injury. We evaluated the predictive value of urinary RBP (RBPu) for development graft dysfunction after kidney transplantation. METHODS Serum creatinine and RBPu were prospectively measured at months 3, 6, and 12 in 221 kidney transplant patients. Baseline graft function was defined as the lowest serum creatinine value during the first 3 months after transplantation. Graft dysfunction was assessed at 1 year as a >-20% or >-30% change in the inverse creatinine ((Delta)1/Cr) compared to baseline value at month 3. RESULTS Among 183 patients with normal graft function (Cr </= 1.6 mg/dL) the mean (Delta)1/Cr from month 3 to 12 was -17 +/- 22% (-80% to + 44%). Using a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis, concentrations higher than 0.6 mg/L showed the best predictive value for diagnosis of graft dysfunction at 1 year. Mean (Delta)1/Cr from month 3 to 12 was -13 +/- 20% for those with RBP < 0.6 mg/L vs -20 +/- 23% in those with RBPu > 0.6 mg/L (95% CI = -13% to -1.3%, P =.018). The percentage of patients with >-20% or >-30% (Delta)1/Cr was higher among patients with RBPu > 0.6 mg/L (34% vs 47%, P =.042; 21% vs 34%, P =.035). RBPu > 0.6 mg/L was the only variable independently associated with >-30% (Delta)1/Cr at 1 year, with an odds ratio (OR) of 1.95 (95% CI 0.99 to 3.80, P =.05). CONCLUSIONS RBPu may serve as a surrogate marker for graft dysfunction early after transplantation for patients with normal graft function, allowing early institution of intervention therapies to prolong allograft survival.
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2005
S.I. Park; Claudia Rosso Felipe; P.G.P Machado; R. Garcia; A. Skerjanec; Robert Schmouder; Helio Tedesco-Silva; Jose O. Medina-Pestana
FTY720 is a new and effective immunosuppressive agent, which produces peripheral blood lymphopenia through a lymphocyte homing effect. We investigated the relationship between the dose of FTY720 or blood concentration (pharmacokinetics, PK) and peripheral lymphopenia (pharmacodynamics, PD) in 23 kidney transplant recipients randomized to receive FTY720 (0.25-2.5 mg/day) or mofetil mycophenolate (2 mg/day) in combination with cyclosporine and steroids. FTY720 dose, blood concentrations and lymphocyte counts were determined weekly before and 4 to 12 weeks after transplantation. The effect of PD was calculated as the absolute lymphocyte count or its reductions. PK/PD modeling was used to find the best-fit model. Mean FTY720 concentrations were 0.36 +/- 0.05 (0.25 mg), 0.73 +/- 0.12 (0.5 mg), 3.26 +/- 0.51 (1 mg), and 7.15 +/- 1.41 ng/ml (2.5 mg) between 4 and 12 weeks after transplantation. FTY720 PK was linear with dose (r(2) = 0.98) and showed low inter- and intra-individual variability. FTY720 produced a dose-dependent increase in mean percent reduction of peripheral lymphocyte counts (38 vs 42 vs 56 vs 77, P < 0.01, respectively). The simple Emax model [E = (Emax * C)/(C + EC50)] was the best-fit PK/PD modeling for FTY720 dose (Emax = 87.8 +/- 5.3% and ED50 = 0.48 +/- 0.08 mg, r(2) = 0.94) or concentration (Emax = 78.3 +/- 2.9% and EC50 = 0.59 +/- 0.09 ng/ml, r(2) = 0.89) vs effect (% reduction in peripheral lymphocytes). FTY720 PK/PD is dose dependent and follows an Emax model (EC50 = 0.5 mg or 0.6 ng/ml). Using lymphopenia as an FTY720 PD surrogate marker, high % reductions (~80%) in peripheral lymphocytes are required to achieve best efficacy to prevent acute allograft rejection.
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2007
R. Garcia; P.G.P Machado; Claudia Rosso Felipe; S.I. Park; G.A. Spinelli; M. Franco; Helio Tedesco-Silva; Jose O. Medina-Pestana
Chronic allograft nephropathy is among the major causes of graft loss even in low-risk kidney transplant recipients and correlates with acute nephrotoxic events during the first year post-transplant. Therefore, calcineurin inhibitor-free regimens may improve patient and graft survival among recipients of living-related kidney transplants. To confirm this hypothesis, we evaluated the efficacy and safety of two calcineurin inhibitor-free regimens in 92 low-risk recipients of one-haplotype living-related kidney transplants. Immunosuppression consisted of tacrolimus, azathioprine and prednisone (group I, GI, N = 38), 2 doses of daclizumab, mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), and prednisone (GII, N = 33) and 2 doses of daclizumab, MMF, sirolimus and prednisone (GIII, N = 21). At 12 months, treatment failure (biopsy-confirmed acute rejection, graft loss or death) was higher in GII compared to GIII and GI (54.5 vs 24.0 vs 13.1%, P < 0.01, respectively). In patients of black ethnicity the incidence of acute rejection was 25 vs 83.3 vs 20% (P = 0.055), respectively. Patient and graft survival was comparable. There were no differences in mean creatinine or calculated creatinine clearance at 12 months. Overall incidence of post-transplant diabetes mellitus (3.3%) and cytomegalovirus disease (4.3%) was similar in all groups. Further development of effective calcineurin inhibitor-free regimens should exclude patients of black ethnicity and may need full-induction therapy, perhaps with depleting agents, and concentration-controlled use of sirolimus and MMF.
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2006
G.A. Spinelli; Claudia Rosso Felipe; P.G.P Machado; R. Garcia; Dulce Elena Casarini; Silvia Moreira; S.I. Park; Helio Tedesco-Silva; Jose O. Medina-Pestana
The influence of drug concentrations on the development of persistent posttransplant hyperlipidemia was investigated in 82 patients who received cyclosporin A (CsA) and prednisone plus sirolimus (SRL) (52) or azathioprine (AZA) (30) during the first year after transplantation. Blood levels of CsA and SRL, daily doses of AZA and prednisone, and cholesterol, triglyceride, and glucose concentrations were determined during each visit (pretransplant and 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, and 360 days posttransplant). Persistent hyperlipidemia was defined as one-year average steady-state cholesterol (CavCHOL) or triglyceride (CavTG) concentrations above 240 and 200 mg/dL, respectively. Mean cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations increased after transplantation (P < 0.01) and were higher in patients receiving SRL compared to AZA (P < 0.001). Patients receiving SRL showed a significantly higher number of cholesterol (> 229 or > 274 mg/dL) and triglyceride (> 198 or > 282 mg/dL) determinations in the upper interquartile ranges. CsA and SRL interquartile ranges correlated with cholesterol concentrations (P = 0.001) whereas only SRL interquartile ranges correlated with triglyceride concentrations (P < 0.0001). Only pretransplant cholesterol concentration > 205 mg/dL was independently associated with development of persistent hypercholesterolemia (CavCHOL > 240 mg/dL, relative risk (RR) = 20, CI 3.8-104.6, P = 0.0004) whereas pretransplant triglyceride concentration > 150 mg/dL (RR = 7.2, CI 1.6-32.4, P = 0.01) or > 211 mg/dL (RR = 19.8, CI 3.6-107.9, P = 0.0006) and use of SRL (RR = 3, CI 1.0-8.8, P = 0.0049) were independently associated with development of persistent hypertriglyceridemia (CavTG > 200 mg/dL). Persistent hypercholesterolemia was more frequent among patients with higher pretransplant cholesterol concentrations and was dependent on both CsA and SRL concentrations. Persistent hypertriglyceridemia was more frequent among patients with higher pretransplant triglyceride concentrations and was dependent on SRL concentrations.
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2004
P.G.P Machado; Claudia Rosso Felipe; S.I. Park; R. Garcia; Silvia Moreira; Dulce Elena Casarini; M. Franco; F. Alfieri; Helio Tedesco-Silva; Jose O. Medina-Pestana
The use of sirolimus (SRL) in combination with full doses of cyclosporin A (CsA) results in reduced one-year kidney allograft function, which is associated with shorter long-term allograft survival. We determined the effect of reduced CsA exposure on graft function in patients receiving SRL and prednisone. Ninety recipients of living kidney transplants receiving SRL (2 mg/day, po) were compared to 35 recipients receiving azathioprine (AZA, 2 mg kg-1 day-1, po). All patients also received CsA (8-10 mg kg-1 day-1, po) and prednisone (0.5 mg kg-1 day-1). Efficacy end-point was a composite of biopsy-confirmed acute rejection, graft loss, or death at one year. Graft function was measured by creatinine, creatinine clearance, and graft function deterioration between 3 and 12 months (delta1/Cr). CsA concentrations in patients receiving SRL were 26% lower. No differences in one-year composite efficacy end-point were observed comparing SRL and AZA groups (18 vs 20%) or in the incidence of biopsy-proven acute rejection (14.4 and 14.3%). There were no differences in mean +/- SD creatinine (1.65 +/- 0.46 vs 1.60 +/- 0.43 mg/dl, P = 0.48) or calculated creatinine clearances (61 +/- 15 vs 62 +/- 13 ml/min, P = 0.58) at one year. Mean +/- SD delta1/Cr (-11 +/- 17 vs -14 +/- 15%, P = 0.7) or the percentage of patients with >20% (26 vs 31%, P = 0.6) or >30% delta1/Cr (19 vs 17%, P = 1) did not differ between the two groups. The use of 2-mg fixed oral doses of SRL and reduced CsA exposure was effective in preventing acute rejection and preserving allograft function.
Transplantation Proceedings | 2003
H. Tedesco Silva; Claudia Rosso Felipe; P.G.P Machado; R. Garcia; S Motegi; B.H Hosaka; N.M Hanzawa; Sung In Park; D.E Casarini; Vitor Lima; M. Franco; Jose O. Medina-Pestana
UNLABELLED We show the key results of our 4-year experience with sirolimus in kidney transplant patients and in nontransplanted patients undergoing coronary angioplasty. METHODS Recipients of one-haplotype living-related kidney allografts were randomized to receive sirolimus (2 mg/d, n = 35) or azathioprine (2 mg/kg per day, n = 35). Recipients of fully mismatched living kidney allografts (n = 55) received sirolimus (2 mg/day). High-risk recipients of black ethnicity (n = 68) were randomized to target whole-blood trough sirolimus concentrations between 8 and 12 ng/mL or 15 to 20 ng/mL. All kidney transplant patients received cyclosporine and prednisone. Sirolimus/cyclosporine pharmacokinetic studies were performed in 40 patients receiving 2 mg (n = 20) or 5 mg (n = 20) of sirolimus 7 days after transplantation. In the coronary intervention study, 12 patients at high risk for in-stent restenosis received sirolimus for 28 days after angioplasty. RESULTS The incidence of biopsy-confirmed acute rejection was 11.4% in recipients of one-haplotype living-related kidney allografts, 16.4% in recipients of fully mismatched living kidney allografts, and 15% (8 to 12 ng/mL) and 4% (15 to 20 ng/mL) in high-risk recipients of black ethnicity. Cyclosporine exposure was higher after morning administration compared to evening administration. There were poor correlations between sirolimus and cyclosporine exposures. The 4-month follow-up angiography revealed no restenosis (stenosis diameter > 50%), a late loss of 0.56 +/- 0.40 mm, and a loss index of 0.33 +/- 0.30. The follow-up 3D-intravascular ultrasound restudy showed an in-stent relative volumetric obstruction of 9.9 +/- 5.5%. Sirolimus in highly effective in preventing kidney allograft acute rejection and in-stent coronary restenosis.
Transplantation Proceedings | 2002
P.G.P Machado; H. Tedesco; R.G Silva; Alvaro Pacheco-Silva; J.O.P Medina
MONOCLONAL anti-CD3 antibodies have been widely used for the treatment of acute allograft rejection (AR) episodes and for induction therapy (IT). Their impact on long-term survival has been demonstrated mainly in high-risk patients. Recent data have suggested that this antibody may be used at reduced doses without compromising its efficacy. We report here our experience with 58 kidney transplant (Tx) patients in which low daily doses of OKT3 were used as IT or for the treatment of severe or steroid-resistant AR.
Transplantation Proceedings | 2002
R. da Silva; Vitor Lima; J.E Amorim; P.G.P Machado; Alvaro Pacheco-Silva; Jose O. Medina-Pestana
Transplantation Proceedings | 2006
E.B. Rangel; S.A. Gomes; P.G.P Machado; B.F. Cardoso dos Santos; J.O. Medina Pestana; Alvaro Pacheco-Silva; I.P. Heilberg
Transplantation Proceedings | 2004
Jose O. Medina-Pestana; Claudia Rosso Felipe; S.I. Park; P.G.P Machado; R. Garcia; G.A. Spinelli; L.A. Silva; C.F Santos; Helio Tedesco-Silva