Efficacy and safety of basiliximab in pediatric renal transplant patients receiving cyclosporine, mycophenolate mofetil, and steroids.

  • Gisela Offner
  • Burkhard Toenshoff
  • Britta Höcker
  • Manuela Krauss
  • Monika Bulla
  • Pierre Cochat
  • Henry Fehrenbach
  • Wolfgang Fischer
  • Michel Foulard
  • Bernd Hoppe
  • Peter F Hoyer
  • Therese C Jungraithmayr
  • Günter Klaus
  • Kay Latta
  • Heinz Leichter
  • Michael J Mihatsch
  • Joachim Misselwitz
  • Carmen Montoya
  • Dirk E. Müller-Wiefel
  • Thomas J Neuhaus
  • Lars Pape
  • Uwe Querfeld
  • Christian Plank
  • Dieter Schwarke
  • Simone Wygoda
  • Lothar B Zimmerhackl

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Basiliximab, a monoclonal CD25 antibody has proofed effective in reducing acute rejection episodes in adults in various immunosuppressive regimens. The effect of basiliximab in the pediatric population is controversial. METHODS: In a 12-month, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, renal transplant patients aged 1 to 18 years were randomized to basiliximab or placebo with cyclosporine microemulsion, mycophenolate mofetil, and corticosteroids. The intent-to-treat population comprised 192 patients (100 basiliximab and 92 placebo). RESULTS: The primary efficacy endpoint, time to first biopsy-proven acute rejection episode, or treatment failure by month 6, occurred in 16.7% of basiliximab-treated patients and 21.7% of placebo-treated patients (Kaplan-Meier estimates; hazard ratio 0.72, two-sided 90% confidence interval 0.416-1.26, n.s.). The rate and severity of subclinical rejections in protocol biopsies performed at 6 months posttransplant was higher in the basiliximab group (25.0%) than in the placebo group (11.7%). Patient and death-censored graft survival at 12 months was 97% and 99%, respectively, in the basiliximab cohort, and 100% and 99% among placebo-treated patients (n.s.). Renal function was similar in both treatment groups, and there were no significant between-treatment differences in the incidence of adverse events or infections. CONCLUSIONS: Addition of basiliximab induction to a regimen of cyclosporine microemulsion, mycophenolate mofetil, and steroids resulted in a numerically lower but not significant incidence of biopsy-proven acute rejection versus placebo and excellent graft and patient survival at 1 year in pediatric renal transplant recipients. Whether this numerical difference is a true therapeutic benefit in view of the higher rate and severity of subclinical rejections in the basiliximab group in the protocol biopsy will be investigated in a long-term follow-up study.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheDeutsch
Aufsatznummer9
ISSN0041-1337
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2008
pubmed 19005406