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Title: Detrimental effects of cyclosporin A on long-term graft survival in familial Mediterranean fever renal allograft recipients: experience of two transplantation centers. Author: Shabtai M, Ben-Haim M, Zemer D, Malinger-Saavedra P, Rosin D, Kuriansky J, Lustig S, Shabtai EL, Shapira Z, Ayalon A. Journal: Isr Med Assoc J; 2002 Nov; 4(11 Suppl):935-9. PubMed ID: 12455184. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Cyclosporin A has been associated with severe toxic side effects in patients with familial Mediterranean fever who underwent renal transplantation. Nevertheless, the impact on graft function and survival is not well documented. OBJECTIVE: To compare long-term graft function and survival, between CsA-based vs. CsA free immunosuppressive protocols in FMF recipients of renal allograft. METHODS: Data of FMF recipients were analyzed retrospectively. Graft survival and function and the incidence of acute rejection were correlated to graft source (living donor vs. cadaveric donor), colchicine dose, presence of proteinuria, and immunosuppression protocol (CsA-based triple drug therapy vs. azathioprine-prednisone alone). RESULTS: There were 35 FMF patients with primary renal grafts (13 from living donors and 22 from cadaveric donors). Mean follow-up was 10.6 +/- 6.05 years. Sixteen patients were on CsA-based triple drug therapy and 19 patients on AZA-Pred alone. Mean overall graft survival was 11.2 +/- 0.6 years and 9.4 +/- 1.36 vs. 11.6 +/- 0.4 years for CsA-treated and AZA-Pred groups respectively (P = 0.05). One-year survival was 94% and 96.6% for CsA-treated vs. non-CsA patients (not significant), but 5 and 10 years survival were 76% and 46%, compared to 94.5% and 86% respectively (P = 0.05 at 5 years and 0.001 at 10 years). Mean serum creatinine at time of data collection was 2.3 +/- 1.5 mg/dl in the CsA group vs. 1.6 +/- 0.7 mg/dl in the AZA-Pred group (P = 0.02). There were 14 and 13 reversible rejection episodes in the AZA-Pred and CsA groups respectively (not significant). CONCLUSION: It is suggested that CsA exerts detrimental effects on long-term renal graft function and survival in FMF patients.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]