Safety, tolerability, and efficacy of everolimus in de novo liver transplant recipients: 12- and 36-month results.

Standard

Safety, tolerability, and efficacy of everolimus in de novo liver transplant recipients: 12- and 36-month results. / Levy, Gary; Schmidli, Heinz; Punch, Jeffrey; Tuttle-Newhall, Elizabeth; Mayer, David; Neuhaus, Peter; Samuel, Didier; Nashan, Björn; Klempnauer, Juergen; Langnas, Alan; Calmus, Yvon; Rogiers, Xavier; Abecassis, Michael; Freeman, Richard; Sloof, Maarten; Roberts, John; Fischer, Lutz.

in: LIVER TRANSPLANT, Jahrgang 12, Nr. 11, 11, 2006, S. 1640-1648.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Levy, G, Schmidli, H, Punch, J, Tuttle-Newhall, E, Mayer, D, Neuhaus, P, Samuel, D, Nashan, B, Klempnauer, J, Langnas, A, Calmus, Y, Rogiers, X, Abecassis, M, Freeman, R, Sloof, M, Roberts, J & Fischer, L 2006, 'Safety, tolerability, and efficacy of everolimus in de novo liver transplant recipients: 12- and 36-month results.', LIVER TRANSPLANT, Jg. 12, Nr. 11, 11, S. 1640-1648. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16598777?dopt=Citation>

APA

Levy, G., Schmidli, H., Punch, J., Tuttle-Newhall, E., Mayer, D., Neuhaus, P., Samuel, D., Nashan, B., Klempnauer, J., Langnas, A., Calmus, Y., Rogiers, X., Abecassis, M., Freeman, R., Sloof, M., Roberts, J., & Fischer, L. (2006). Safety, tolerability, and efficacy of everolimus in de novo liver transplant recipients: 12- and 36-month results. LIVER TRANSPLANT, 12(11), 1640-1648. [11]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16598777?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Levy G, Schmidli H, Punch J, Tuttle-Newhall E, Mayer D, Neuhaus P et al. Safety, tolerability, and efficacy of everolimus in de novo liver transplant recipients: 12- and 36-month results. LIVER TRANSPLANT. 2006;12(11):1640-1648. 11.

Bibtex

@article{7d226e576b0b4314bcac2d8884bb2bf0,
title = "Safety, tolerability, and efficacy of everolimus in de novo liver transplant recipients: 12- and 36-month results.",
abstract = "Everolimus is a macrolide immunosuppressive agent with known consistent absorption. In this double-blind study, we examined the safety and tolerability of everolimus vs. placebo in de novo liver transplant recipients. One hundred and nineteen liver allograft recipients were randomized to 1 of 4 groups: everolimus 0.5 mg bid, everolimus 1.0 mg bid, everolimus 2 mg bid, or placebo. Patients received oral cyclosporine to achieve a target trough level of 150-400 ng/mL in combination with prednisone. Primary and secondary endpoints of safety, tolerability, and efficacy were determined at 12 months, and patients were followed through 36 months. There was a trend toward fewer treated acute rejections in the everolimus group than in the placebo group: everolimus 0.5 mg: 39.3%; everolimus 1.0 mg: 30.0%; everolimus 2 mg: 29.0%; placebo: 40.0% (P = not significant). Adverse events were higher in everolimus-treated patients especially at the 4-mg/day dose, but there was no difference in the incidence of thrombocytopenia or leukopenia between all groups and renal function as determined by serum creatinine, and creatinine clearance remained stable to 36 months in everolimus-treated patients. Mean cholesterol and triglycerides increased from baseline in all treatment groups, and maximum levels were seen at 6 months. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that everolimus in combination with oral cyclosporine had an acceptable safety and tolerability profile, paving the way for additional studies in this transplant indication.",
author = "Gary Levy and Heinz Schmidli and Jeffrey Punch and Elizabeth Tuttle-Newhall and David Mayer and Peter Neuhaus and Didier Samuel and Bj{\"o}rn Nashan and Juergen Klempnauer and Alan Langnas and Yvon Calmus and Xavier Rogiers and Michael Abecassis and Richard Freeman and Maarten Sloof and John Roberts and Lutz Fischer",
year = "2006",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "12",
pages = "1640--1648",
journal = "LIVER TRANSPLANT",
issn = "1527-6465",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Safety, tolerability, and efficacy of everolimus in de novo liver transplant recipients: 12- and 36-month results.

AU - Levy, Gary

AU - Schmidli, Heinz

AU - Punch, Jeffrey

AU - Tuttle-Newhall, Elizabeth

AU - Mayer, David

AU - Neuhaus, Peter

AU - Samuel, Didier

AU - Nashan, Björn

AU - Klempnauer, Juergen

AU - Langnas, Alan

AU - Calmus, Yvon

AU - Rogiers, Xavier

AU - Abecassis, Michael

AU - Freeman, Richard

AU - Sloof, Maarten

AU - Roberts, John

AU - Fischer, Lutz

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - Everolimus is a macrolide immunosuppressive agent with known consistent absorption. In this double-blind study, we examined the safety and tolerability of everolimus vs. placebo in de novo liver transplant recipients. One hundred and nineteen liver allograft recipients were randomized to 1 of 4 groups: everolimus 0.5 mg bid, everolimus 1.0 mg bid, everolimus 2 mg bid, or placebo. Patients received oral cyclosporine to achieve a target trough level of 150-400 ng/mL in combination with prednisone. Primary and secondary endpoints of safety, tolerability, and efficacy were determined at 12 months, and patients were followed through 36 months. There was a trend toward fewer treated acute rejections in the everolimus group than in the placebo group: everolimus 0.5 mg: 39.3%; everolimus 1.0 mg: 30.0%; everolimus 2 mg: 29.0%; placebo: 40.0% (P = not significant). Adverse events were higher in everolimus-treated patients especially at the 4-mg/day dose, but there was no difference in the incidence of thrombocytopenia or leukopenia between all groups and renal function as determined by serum creatinine, and creatinine clearance remained stable to 36 months in everolimus-treated patients. Mean cholesterol and triglycerides increased from baseline in all treatment groups, and maximum levels were seen at 6 months. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that everolimus in combination with oral cyclosporine had an acceptable safety and tolerability profile, paving the way for additional studies in this transplant indication.

AB - Everolimus is a macrolide immunosuppressive agent with known consistent absorption. In this double-blind study, we examined the safety and tolerability of everolimus vs. placebo in de novo liver transplant recipients. One hundred and nineteen liver allograft recipients were randomized to 1 of 4 groups: everolimus 0.5 mg bid, everolimus 1.0 mg bid, everolimus 2 mg bid, or placebo. Patients received oral cyclosporine to achieve a target trough level of 150-400 ng/mL in combination with prednisone. Primary and secondary endpoints of safety, tolerability, and efficacy were determined at 12 months, and patients were followed through 36 months. There was a trend toward fewer treated acute rejections in the everolimus group than in the placebo group: everolimus 0.5 mg: 39.3%; everolimus 1.0 mg: 30.0%; everolimus 2 mg: 29.0%; placebo: 40.0% (P = not significant). Adverse events were higher in everolimus-treated patients especially at the 4-mg/day dose, but there was no difference in the incidence of thrombocytopenia or leukopenia between all groups and renal function as determined by serum creatinine, and creatinine clearance remained stable to 36 months in everolimus-treated patients. Mean cholesterol and triglycerides increased from baseline in all treatment groups, and maximum levels were seen at 6 months. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that everolimus in combination with oral cyclosporine had an acceptable safety and tolerability profile, paving the way for additional studies in this transplant indication.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 12

SP - 1640

EP - 1648

JO - LIVER TRANSPLANT

JF - LIVER TRANSPLANT

SN - 1527-6465

IS - 11

M1 - 11

ER -