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Featured researches published by Stuart M. Flechner.


Transplantation | 1987

Hepatobiliary and pancreatic complications of cyclosporine therapy in 466 renal transplant recipients

Marc I. Lorber; C. T. Van Buren; Stuart M. Flechner; C. Williams; Kahan Bd

Two hundred twenty-eight patients from a total of 466 (49%) receiving renal allografts under cyclospo-rine/prednisone (CsA/Pred) immunosuppression experienced at least one episode of posttransplant hepato-toxicity. All patients were documented to have normal serum bilirubin, serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT), serum glutamic pyruvate transaminase (SGPT), lactic acid dehydrogenase (LDH), and alkaline phosphatase (AP), as well as negative results of biliary ultrasound and upper gastrointestinal contrast examinations prior to transplantation. Hepatotoxic episodes usually were self-limited (82%), and generally occurred during the very early posttransplant period (76%). Liver function abnormalities included hyperbilirubinemia (48% of patients), elevated SGOT (47%), SGPT (73%), LDH (84%), and AP (59%). The CsA serum trough radioimmunoassay (RIA) was relatively high among hepatotoxic patients with a mean value of 225± 17 ng/ml. Pharmacokinetic parameters, including bioavailability and drug clearance, were significantly altered among this group of patients. The management strategy of CsA dose reduction was effective; however, 11 patients (2.4%) developed biliary calculous disease posttransplant while under CsA/Pred immunosuppression. Seven patients had cholelithiasis, and two patients underwent choledochoduodenostomy because of primary choledocholithiasis. The results contrast with 279 renal transplant recipients from an overlapping nonrandomized group treated with azathioprine (Aza)/Pred in whom cholelithiasis was not identified. Pancreatic abnormalities were relatively common, but clinical pancreatic disease occurred in only six patients. There were two episodes of acute pancreatitis, three patients developed pancreatic abscess, and one patient developed a pancreatic pseudocyst. The apparent proclivity of CsA-treated patients to develop biliary calculous disease, and the occurrence of serious pancreatic complications in a small percentage of patients did not affect the majority of CsA-treated patients. They may, however, represent important problems associated with the use of this immunosuppressive agent.


Transplantation | 1987

Complications of cyclosporine-prednisone immunosuppression in 402 renal allograft recipients exclusively followed at a single center for from one to five years.

Kahan Bd; Stuart M. Flechner; Marc I. Lorber; D. Golden; Susan B. Conley; C. T. Van Buren

The therapeutic efficacy of cyclosporine (CsA) as an immunosuppressive agent was complemented by a modest, long-term incidence of toxic complications in 402 renal allograft recipients engrafted one to five years prior to analysis. The overall patient and graft survivals at one year were 97% and 84% (actual), and at five years 92% and 67% (actuarial). The immunosuppressive therapeutic index was excellent: only 12% of allografts were lost from rejection, with 5% of patients succumbing to infection. While infections were common, tending to emanate in the urinary tract or to be viral in etiology, they were generally mild and readily controlled. Only four patients displayed malignancies; none succumbed to this cause. The most common toxic complication was hypertrichosis, which was accentuated in pediatric patients. While tremors occurred in 20% of patients, primarily during the first three months, other neuroectodermal complications of parethesias, depression, somnolence, and seizures were rare. Hepatotoxicity, which was noted in 50% of patients, particularly recipients of cadaveric grafts, generally was first seen as a transaminase elevation, at least partially reversible by dose-reduction and abating by the third year. Associated disturbances of cholelithiasis and pancreatitis were occasionally observed. Nephrotoxicity was the only persistent, long-term complication. Hypertension occurred in 72% of patients during the first month, 36% in the second year, and about 15% thereafter. Hyperuricemia, which occurred in about 30% of recipients during the first two years, was occasionally associated with symptomatic gout. The mean serum creatinine level remained elevated throughout the follow-up period at 1.8—1.9 mg/dl, suggesting persistent, but nonprogressive, drug-induced renal injury. The present analysis documents the relative safety of CsA for long-term therapy, and highlights the need for new approaches to ameliorate drug-induced nephrotoxicity.


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 1985

The Presence of Cyclosporine in Body Tissues and Fluids During Pregnancy

Stuart M. Flechner; Allan R. Katz; A.J. Rogers; Charles T. Van Buren; Barry D. Kahan

A term pregnancy, labor, and delivery is reported in a cyclosporine- and prednisone-treated female cadaveric renal allograft recipient. A male child, small for gestational age at 2370 g, was born at 38 weeks of gestation with neither congenital anomalies nor nephrotoxicity or hepatotoxicity. Cyclosporine (CSA) concentrations as determined by a radioimmunoassay are reported in maternal and fetal tissues. CSA is present in the fetal circulation during gestation at similar concentrations to those in the mother. Fetal serum at birth displayed 25% suppression of a third-party mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC) compared with control incubations. CSA was present in maternal breast milk; therefore, breastfeeding of children by CSA-treated mothers should be avoided.


Transplantation | 1986

Demographic factors affecting the pharmacokinetics of cyclosporine estimated by radioimmunoassay

Kahan Bd; Kramer Wg; Wideman C; Stuart M. Flechner; Marc I. Lorber; Van Buren Ct

In order to assess the impact of demographic factors on serum levels of cyclosporine (CsA) estimated by radioimmunoassay (RIA) in renal allograft recipients, 493 pharmacokinetic studies were performed in 212 patients. Neither the presence of diabetes mellitus nor the CsA dosing frequency affected the measured pharmacokinetic parameters. Age over 45 years led to slower CsA clearance with resultant increase in maximum serum concentration (Cmax) per administered milligram, and increased volume of distribution. Female patients showed more rapid drug clearance, but greater volume of distribution. Concomitant hepatic impairment reduced drug clearance, increasing the area under the curve (AUC) per administered milligram of drug, and the Cmax. Patients treated with a rapid steroid taper showed a shorter half-life and lower Cmax than those receiving a slow steroid taper. Nephrotoxicity was associated with increased AUC per administered mg, while patients with acute tubular necrosis requiring dialysis showed poorer drug absorption, lower Cmax, and longer time to peak. The only effect of cimetidine administration was a slightly shortened time to peak. Serial analyses posttransplant in 17 patients suggested a tendency toward improved drug absorption with no effect on other parameters. These studies demonstrating the significant impact of demographic factors thus afford a basis on which to predict the trend of anticipated CsA levels as measured by RIA in renal allograft recipients


Transplantation | 1987

Exacerbation of cyclosporine toxicity by concomitant administration of erythromycin.

C. W. B. Jensen; Stuart M. Flechner; C. T. Van Buren; O. H. Frazier; Denton A. Cooley; Marc I. Lorber; Kahan Bd

Cyclosporine (CsA), an immunosuppressive drug widely used in clinical organ transplantation, causes a variety of side effects, including parenchymal complications of nephrotoxicity and hepatotoxicity. Erythromycin ethinylsuccinate (EES), a macrolide antibiotic frequently administered to transplant patients afflicted with pneumonias caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Legionella pneumophila, markedly potentiated parenchymal drug toxicity in nine (three renal and six cardiac) CsA-treated allograft recipients. The mean and median blood urea nitrogen (BUN), creatinine, and total bilirubin increased upon initiation of EES treatment: in the renal recipients from 27, 1.7, and 0.5 mg/dl, respectively, before, to a mean and median of 81/101, 8.3/3.9, and 2.1/1.2 mg/dl during, and to 72/22, 1.9/1.7, and 0.6/0.5 mg/dl after cessation of EES treatment. The median serum radioimmunoassay (RIA)-determined CsA trough value of 147 ng/ml prior, rose to a zenith of 1125 ng/ml during, EES therapy. In the six cardiac recipients, the mean and median BUN, creatinine, and total bilirubin of 51/45, 1.5/1.3, 1.2/1.3 mg/dl, respectively, before, rose to 100/91, 3.7/3.6, and 2.3/2.1 mg/dl during, and fell to 49/44, 1.8/2.1, and 1.0/0.8 mg/dl after, cessation of EES. The mean serum CsA trough value of 185 ng/ml rose to 815 ng/ml during EES administration. Since EES and CsA are both metabolized by the hepatic cytochrome P450 mixed-function oxidase system, simultaneous use of these two drugs may decrease CsA metabolism, with consequent elevation of blood levels and induction of CsA toxicity. Therefore, blood level monitoring and careful regulation of CsA dose are necessary, in order to achieve the safe use of EES in transplant recipients.


Transplantation | 1989

The impact of body weight on cyclosporine pharmacokinetics in renal transplant recipients.

Stuart M. Flechner; Magnus E. Kolbeinsson; Janice Tam; Burton Lum

In order to assess the effect of body weight on cyclosporine disposition, 45 adult uremic candidates for renal transplantation underwent detailed nutritional assessment and pharmacokinetic analysis. There were 10 obese and 35 nonobese patients defined as actual body weight (ABW) greater than 125 Per cent of ideal body weight (IBW), and arm fat area greater than 90th percentile. There was no significant difference in demographic variables such as age, sex, number of diabetics, IBW, serum lipids, or liver function tests between the 2 groups. Although there was a significant difference in ABW, pharmacokinetic analyses failed to demonstrate significant differences in bioavailability, elimination half-life, clearance, or apparent steady state volume of distribution when these calculations were normalized by IBW, body surface area, or as absolute values. Multiple stepwise linear regression failed to demonstrate a significant correlation between serum lipids or body size measurements and these parameters. When dosed according to ABW, obese recipients of renal allografts had a mean serum RIA trough level of 227 ng/ml as compared to 121 ng/ml in nonobese recipients on day 7. Therefore in order to achieve comparable drug concentrations in the early transplant period, CsA should be given to obese patients based on their IBW.


Transplantation | 1987

Multivariate Analysis Of Risk Factors Impacting On Immediate And Eventual Cadaver Allograft Survival In Cyclosporine-treated Recipients

Barry D. Kahan; Ray Mickey; Stuart M. Flechner; Marc I. Lorber; Wideman Ca; Ronald H. Kerman; Paul I. Terasaki; Charles T. Van Buren

A multivariate analysis dissected the impact of donor procurement variables, immunologic risk factors, and alternate cyclosporine and prednisone induction immunosuppressive regimens on the early and eventual function of 303 consecutive cadaveric renal allografts. Primarily warm, but to a slight extent cold, ischemia time had an adverse impact on allograft function, as did the requirement for vasopressor or diuretic therapy. The occurrence of initial graft nonfunction adversely affected the probability of three-month graft survival, but did not alter either the longevity of organs, which subsequently recovered function, or patient mortality rate. The major immunologic risk factor was a second or multiple transplant, which was associated with an increased incidence of early graft failure, and impaired renal function in successful transplants. Correlations with HLA-B and DR matching were reflected in the quality of renal function, but not in graft survival rates. Cyclosporine (CsA) administration by continuous intravenous infusion, in order to avert initial elevated mean three-day, serum radioimmunoassay drug levels reduced the incidence of initial graft non-function. High levels were also associated with impaired early and eventual renal function. Rapid posttransplant taper of corticosteroids to 30 mg prednisone by day six was associated with a greater incidence of rejection episodes and early graft failure than a taper that achieved 30 mg prednisone at 60 days. Both the serum creatinine value and the degree of hypertension observed at one month afforded good prognostic indices of eventual graft survival. Therefore, renal allografts in CsA-treated patients were sensitive not only to adverse donor and immunologic risk factors, but also to excessive CsA drug levels in the early postoperative period. These findings suggest an induction immunosuppressive strategy utilizing slightly higher initial doses of steroids for CsA-sparing during the first three days, followed by increased, but judicious, administration of CsA to achieve steroid-sparing by virtue of effective rejection prophylaxis.


Transplantation | 1998

TRANSPLANTATION OF PEDIATRIC EN BLOC CADAVER KIDNEYS INTO ADULT RECIPIENTS1

Michael G. Hobart; Charles S. Modlin; Anil Kapoor; Navdeep Boparai; Barbara Mastroianni; Doreen Papajcik; Stuart M. Flechner; David A. Goldfarb; Rosemaree Fischer; Kiaran J. O'Malley; Andrew C. Novick

BACKGROUND To maximize the renal donor pool, cadaveric pediatric en bloc kidneys have been transplanted as a dual unit by some transplant centers. We compared the short- and long-term outcomes of adult recipients of cadaveric pediatric en bloc renal transplants versus those of matched recipients of cadaveric adult kidneys. METHODS Thirty-three adults who received pediatric en bloc kidney transplants between April 1990 and September 1997 were retrospectively identified and were compared with 33 matched adults who received adult cadaveric kidney transplants. The groups were identical for transplantation era, immunosuppression, recipient sex, race, cause of renal failure, mean weight, and follow-up duration (37.8 vs. 37.5 months). The mean recipient age study versus control was lower (36.3 vs. 48.9 years, P=0.0003). Results. There was no difference between the en bloc and adult donor groups in the 3-year patient survival rates (95% vs. 87%, P=0.16) or the 3-year graft survival rates (87.3% vs. 84.2%, P=0.35). Further, there was no difference in en bloc patient or en bloc graft survival time stratified by recipient age (14-44 vs. >45 years, P=0.11), en bloc donor age (<24 vs. >24 months, P=0.39), or recipient weight (<60, 61-75, >75 kg; P=0.60). Differences in serum creatinine (mg/dl) for the en bloc versus the control group at the time of discharge (3.0 vs. 7.8 mg/dl, P=0.06), at 1 year (1.4 vs. 2.0 mg/dl, P=0.06), and at 2 years (1.1 vs. 1.6 mg/dl, P=0.14) had dissipated by the time of the 5-year follow-up examination (1.1 vs. 1.6 mg/dl, P=0.14). Vascular complications were more prevalent in the en bloc group: renal vein thrombosis (one case), thrombosis of donor aorta (two cases), arterial thrombosis of one renal moiety (two cases), and renal artery stenosis (two cases). There were no differences between groups in delayed graft function, acute or chronic rejection, posttransplant hypertension, posttransplant protein-uria, or long-term graft function. CONCLUSIONS Collectively, these data indicate that transplanting pediatric en bloc kidneys into adult recipients results in equivalent patient and graft survival compared with adult cadaveric kidneys. Further, the data also suggest that pediatric en bloc kidneys need not be strictly allocated based on recipient weight or age criteria.


Transplantation | 2009

Sirolimus in kidney transplantation indications and practical guidelines: de novo sirolimus-based therapy without calcineurin inhibitors.

Stuart M. Flechner

A de novo calcineurin inhibitor avoidance regimen based on sirolimus has been successfully used worldwide; demonstrating improved renal function from 1 to 5 years. This includes use of an induction antibody followed by sirolimus, mycophenolate mofetil, and steroids. This combination has a somewhat different side effect profile and wider experience has revealed that the use of de novo sirolimus requires careful therapeutic drug level monitoring, especially the first 6 months posttransplant. Experience has also demonstrated that delaying the introduction of sirolimus in patients considered at high risk for early mammalian target of rapamycin associated complications will optimize these results. For such recipients, the initial use of a calcineurin inhibitor drug for 2 to 4 months is preferred, followed by conversion to sirolimus. The late withdrawal of steroids may be possible, but awaits further evaluation in randomized controlled trials.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1985

Use of cyclosporine in pediatric renal transplant recipients

Susan B. Conley; Stuart M. Flechner; Gilbert Rose; Charles T. Van Buren; Eileen D. Brewer; Barry D. Kahan

Cyclosporine and prednisone were used in combination to produce immunosuppression in 18 pediatric recipients of renal allografts. Ten children received cadaveric kidneys and eight received kidneys from living related donors. With a mean follow-up of 16.5 months (range 7 to 33 months), the patient survival rate is 100% (18 of 18) and the graft survival rate is 83% (15 of 18). Two grafts were lost for nonimmunologic reasons. Currently the group mean (±SE) serum creatinine concentration is 1.22±0.11 mg/dl and creatinine clearance is 69.3±4.79 ml/min/1.73m 2 . Cyclosporine nephrotoxicity has not caused irreversible allograft injury nor led to graft loss in this population. The incidence of treated rejection episodes has been 39% (seven of 18). Only 39% (seven of 18) of children have required hospital readmissions since the initial transplant discharge. There have been no opportunistic infections. In the 15 children with functioning grafts, some linear growth has occurred in 10 of 11 prepubertal and two of four postpubertal patients. Cyclosporine and prednisone have constituted a safe, efficacious immunosuppressive regimen for pediatric renal allograft recipients. Longer follow-up will be necessary to confirm whether these advantages persist beyond 2 years.

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Kahan Bd

Northwestern University

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Ronald H. Kerman

Baylor College of Medicine

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Barry D. Kahan

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Van Buren Ct

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Wideman Ca

University of Texas at Austin

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