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  • Title: Ten-year observational follow-up of a randomized trial comparing cyclosporine and tacrolimus therapy combined with steroid withdrawal in living-donor renal transplantation.
    Author: Kim J, Park J, Hwang S, Yoo H, Kim K, Park JB, Jang HR, Lee JE, Kim SJ, Kim YG, Kim DJ, Oh HY, Huh W.
    Journal: Clin Transplant; 2018 Sep; 32(9):e13372. PubMed ID: 30080284.
    Abstract:
    Although various strategies for steroid withdrawal after transplantation have been attempted, there are few reports of the long-term results of steroid withdrawal regimens in kidney transplantation. Earlier, we reported on a 5-year prospective, randomized, single-center trial comparing the safety and efficacy of cyclosporine (CsA) plus mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) with that of tacrolimus (TAC) plus MMF, when steroids were withdrawn 6 months after kidney transplantation in low-risk patients. We now report the 10-year observational data on the study population. We collected data from the database of the Organ Transplantation Center, Samsung Medical Center for 5 years after completion of the original study (TAC group n = 62; CsA group n = 55). The 10-year patient survival, death-censored graft survival, and acute rejection-free survival did not differ between groups (98% vs 96%; P = 0.49, 78% vs 85%; P = 0.75 and 84% vs 76%; P = 0.14 in the TAC group vs CsA group, respectively). In low-risk patients, there was no difference in long-term patient and graft survival between TAC- and CsA-based late steroid withdrawal regimens that included MMF treatment. More long-term randomized clinical trials are needed to clarify the benefits of late steroid withdrawal in kidney transplantation.
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