Transplant Flashcards

1
Q

Presentation of Rejection : Kidney

Increased ___ , and incr ___
Sx’s? (7)
Biopsy?

A

Scr (~20% rise) , BUN

weight gain, fever, malaise, oliguria, graft tenderness, edema, HTN

diffuse infiltration of lymphocytes

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2
Q

Presentation of Rejection : Liver

Incr ??
Sx’s ??
What would liver biopsy show u?

A

AST, ALT, Tbili, alk phos

fever, lethargy, change in color/quantity of bile, graft tenderness, back pain , anorexia,

sometimes difficult to distinguish from recurrent disease like Hep C or Hep B

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3
Q

Presentation of Rejection : Heart
High incidence of ?
Often difficult to ??
Sx’s?

A

Acute rejection
diagnose clinically
low grade fever, lethargy, weakness, SOB, DOE, hypotension , tachycardia, atrial flutter, ventricular arrhythmias, leukocytosis

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4
Q

TX of Acute Rejection
Depends on Severity : Describe what u would do in each scenario

  1. Changing maintenance regimen
  2. Steroid pulse therapy
  3. Steroid resistant therapy
A
  1. a. Increase tacrolimus
    b) Add a secondary agent
    c) Switch from cyclosporine to tacrolimus
  2. Methylprednisolone 500 mg - 1 gram IV per day for 3-5 days followed by taper to pre-rejection steroid dose
  3. a) Thymoglobulin 1 - 1.5 mg/kg IV daily administered over 4-6 hours x 5 days
    OR
    b) Antithymocyte Globulin (Atgam® ) 10-15 mg/kg IV daily x 5 days. Need skin test prior to administration
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5
Q

Calcineurin Inhibs : Cyclosporine and Tacrolimus
-NEVER ____

CYCLOSPORINE :
-Primarily used as ?
Dosing?
AVailable as what formulations?
What do u use to guide dosing ?
Therapeutic range?

A

used together

Alternative to tacrolimus : for neurotoxicity or uncontrolled diabetes with tacrolimus,

Initial Oral Dose : 5-15 mg/kg/day (divided BID)

25 mg, 100 mg capsules, IV and liquid

Therapeutic drug monitoring

100-250 ng/mL

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6
Q

Tacrolimus
-Most widely used immunosuppressant
-Primary agent used together with?
-What can be substituted if AE’s too strong?
-Available as what formulations?
Dosing?

A

1 or 2 additional agents

Cyclosporine

0.5mg, 1mg, 5mg capsules; IV and suspensions

Initial oral : 0.15 - 0.3 mg/kg/day divided BID

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7
Q

Tacrolimus Drug level Monitoring
-Using ___
Therapeutic levels? (titrated to the individual!)

Target Trough level depends on ?

A

Trough concentrations

5-15 ng/mL

time post-transplant
- organ transplanted
- etiology of organ failure
- h/o rejection
- concomitant immunosuppression
- adverse effects
- other disease states
- age (baseline immunosuppressive state

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8
Q

Differences between cyclosporine and tacro

Tacro can do what?
It has a greater incidence of?
It has a LOWER incidence of?

there’s decr tremor with what formulation of tracro?
The initial Envarsus dose is ?

tacro currently only approved for?

A

TREAT REJECTION (in some cases)

HYPERglycemia, tremor

HTN,Gingival hyperpasia, hirsutism

LCPT (Envarsus)
-80% of total daily IR-Tac (Prograf)

Kidney transplant

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9
Q

Calcineurin inhib Interactions:

CYP3A inhibs (7)
CYP3A Inducers (5)
PGP (Only worried about this for cyclosporine)

A

Grapefruit juice, protease inhibs, azole antifungals , macrolide antibiotics (erythro, clarithro), Letermovir, Non DHP CCB’s , amiodarone

Rifampin, phenytoin, carbamazepine, phenobarb, sjw

INCR CONCS of sirolimus, everolimus, digoxin, statins

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10
Q

CNI Nephrotoxicity Tacro and Cyclo

Acute is reversible and ___

Chronic –> Whats affected , what can it cause , what can it do to ur electrolytes?

A

dose dependent

vessels, tubules, glomeruli

chronic interstitial fibrosis

hyperkalemia, hypomagnesemia, hyperuricemia

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11
Q

CNI WIthdrawal in Kidney Transplant :
-180 days post transplant what regimen do u change ur pt’s to

Dosing for MMF and sirolimus

This improved ?

A

Change ur pt’s from CNI/MMF to Sirolimus/MMF 30-180 days post transplant

MMF : 2 grams per day, Siro trough levels of 8 ng/mL

Renal function

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12
Q

Mycophenolate Mofetil (Cellcept)
-Most commonly used ___
Dosing ?
Available as ?
Drug Interactions (3)
Dose limiting AE’s?
BBW in Pregnancy ?
What’s suggested if a woman of childbearing potential?

A

secondary agent
1 gm po BID
1.5 gm BID if AA

250,500 mg caps, IV, suspension

Antacids, cholestyramine, (Decreased absorption), and PPI’s cause decr mycophenolic acid

GI (N/V/D) , BM suppression

Incr risk of 1st trimester preg loss and congenital malformations, REMS program

Contraception during tx and 6 weeks after they stop mycophenolate

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13
Q

Mycophenolic Acid (Myfortic)
-Active form
ALternative to ___ if ___
Dosing?
Dose conversion between cellcept and myfortic?
Available as ___ and ___ tablets

A

mycophen mofetil, GI AE’s such as d,n,v, intolerable

720 mg po BID

cellcept 250 mg = myfortic 180 mg

360 mg and 180 mg tabs

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14
Q

Azathioprine
-Alternative to ___
-CPIC guidelines recommend what
AE’s ?
DDI?

A

mycophenolate

TPMT genetic testing. Low/deficient -> Consider alt agent or extreme dose reduction
Intermediate : Start at 30-70% of target dose

Bone marrow suppression, myopathy,
alopecia, pancreatitis, hepatitis

allopurinol – inhibits xanthine oxidase which increases risk for azathioprine toxicity

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15
Q

MTOR Inhibitors : Sirolimus, Everolimus

What is it’s place in therapy? –>
Can be used as alt to ?
___ sparing - use with low dose ___
ANTI __,___,___

Concentration Guided dosing :
half life?
target levels ?
Sirolimus avail as ?

AE’s?

A

Mycophenolate mofetil

renal, tacrolimus
cancer, atherogenic, fibrotic

Long t1/2: 60 hours (sirolimus); 16-35 hours (everolimus)

(3-10 ng/mL)

0.5 mg, 1 mg, 2 mg tablets, liquid

Impaired wound healing
* Start later post-operatively; need to d/c and re-start if major surgery
* Bone marrow, dyslipidemias, proteinuria, mouth ulcers, angioedema (rare)
* (Black Box warning for use in liver and lung transplantation)

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16
Q

Immunosuppressive Protocols
1) Primary Immunosup Agent ?

2) Secondary Agent?

3) Steroid

4) +/- Induction Agent such as

A

Cyclo or Tacro

Mycophenolate, siro, everolim, or azathioprine

Antithymocyte globulin, basiliximab

17
Q

Post-transplant Infections and Prophylaxis : Phase 1 (1-4 weeks)

Opportunistic Infections -> Rare
What other causes of infection during this time?
Tx for these?

A

Donor or recipient-derived bacteria
Surgical complications
Cdiff

Broad spectrum abx, Antivirals for CMV, HSV, ANtifungals -topical or systemic
TMP/SMX -> UTI, PCJ

18
Q

CMV : Greatest risk 1-6 months post transplant

Prophylaxis ?
TX?

A

Valganciclovir 900mg po daily x 3 - 12 months post-transplant.
Also given during potent immunosuppressive therapy (e.g.
treatment for rejection or antithymocyte therapy)

Ganciclovir 5 mg/kg IV q12 h
Alternatives: CMV Hyperimmune Globulin, Foscarnet

19
Q

Fungal Prophylaxis :
Candida infection -> Describe which drugs u would use
Kidney, Liver, heart

Aspergillus :
Lungs
heart
Liver

A

Kidney : N/A
Liver : Fluconazole
Heart : N/A

Lung : Voriconazole/itraconazole
* Posaconazole/isavuconazole as alternatives

Heart / Liver : Certain scenarios.. use voriconazole

20
Q

PJP Prophylaxis :
Main Drug ??

Alternatives?

A

Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole
* 400 mg/80 mg (SS) PO daily OR
* 800 mg/160 mg (DS) PO three times weekly
- duration 6 months – 1 year
- also serves as UTI prophylaxis for kidney transplant patients

Dapsone 50 – 100 mg po daily (sulfa allergy; need to check G6PD)
* Atovaquone 1500 mg po daily (if patient has leukopenia)
* Pentamidine aerosolized 300 mg nebulized monthl

21
Q
A