Unit 2 - Transplants 2 Flashcards

1
Q

How long does it take for Basiliximab to become effective?

A

36 +/- 14 days

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2
Q

What is the terminal half-life of basiliximab?

A

7.2 +/- 3.2 days

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3
Q

What are the adverse effects of basiliximab?

A
Chimeric nature decreases risk of hypersensitivity/adverse effects associated with full murine antibodies
Severe acute hypersensitivity reactions are rare but have included anaphylaxis:
- hypotension
- tachycardia
- dyspnea
- wheezing
- pulmonary oedema
- respiratory failure
- urticaria
- rash
- pruritis
- sneezing
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4
Q

What is the dosing of basiliximab?

A

Adult dosage:

  • the first dose should be given within 2 hours PRIOR to transplantation
  • the second dose should be give 4 days AFTER transplantation
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5
Q

How is basiliximab administered?

A

Via a peripheral or central vein over 20 - 30 minutes

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6
Q

Why is maintenance immunosuppressive therapy administered to all renal transplant recipients?

A

To prevent acute rejection

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7
Q

What medications are given as maintenance immunosuppression?

A
Calcineurin inhibitors
- cyclosporin
- tacrolimus
mTOR inhibitors
- sirolimus
Steroids
- prednisolone
Purine nucleotide modulators
- mycophenolate
- azathioprine
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8
Q

Why is the level of chronic immunosuppression slowly decreased over time?

A

Lower the overall risk of infection and malignancy as the risk of acute rejection decreases

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9
Q

How long does immunosupressive therapy last?

A

Life-long

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10
Q

What are CNIs?

A

Calcineurin inhibitors

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11
Q

What are the two licenced calcineurin inhibitors?

A
  • cyclosporin

- tacrolimus

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12
Q

What is the function of cyclosporin?

A
  • blocks T-cell cytokine gene transcription
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13
Q

What is the main target of cyclosporin?

A

IL-2 gene

- T-cell growth factor

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14
Q

What is tacrolimus?

A

Macrolide antibiotic extracted from microorganism

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15
Q

What are the side effects of calcineurin inhibitors?

A

Both associated with nephrotoxicity?

  • cyclosporin - hirsutism, hypertension, MARKED NEPHROTOXICITY
  • tacrolimus - glucose intolerance, GREATER INCIDENC OF NEPHROTOXICITY, hyperlipidaemia
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16
Q

How are calcineurin inhibitors metabolised?

A

CYP450 3A4 enzymes

17
Q

Which drugs lead to increased levels of calcineurin inhibitors?

A

CYP450 inhibitors

  • fluconazole
  • erythromycin
  • clarithromycin
  • verapamil
  • diltiazem
18
Q

Which drugs lead to decreased levels of calcineurin inhibitors?

A

CYP450 inducers

  • rifampocom
  • phenytoin
  • carbamazapine
  • St. John’s wort
  • warfarin
19
Q

What is mTOR?

A

mammalian Target of Rapamycin

20
Q

What is the function of sirolimus?

A

Impairs ability of lymphocytes to replicate

- target is mTOR

21
Q

What are the advantages of sirolimus over tacrolimus or cyclosporin?

A

Sirolimus is not nephrotoxic

As effective as cyclosporin in preventing acute rejection and prolonging graft survival

22
Q

What are the disadvantages of sirolimus?

A

Can delay wound healing so generally reserved for use after 3 months of surgery and only where intolerance or withdrawal of calcineurin inhibitors

23
Q

What are the side effects of sirolimus?

A
  • hyperlipidaemia
  • leucopenia
  • delayed wound healing
24
Q

How is sirolimus metabolised?

A

CYP450 3A4 enzymes

25
Q

Why is the co-administration of cyclosporin and sirolimus be separated by at least 4 hours?

A

Cyclosporin can markedly increase oral bioavailability of sirolimus

26
Q

Give two examples of a purine nucleotide modulator

A

Azathioprine - prodrug which gives rise to 6-mercaptopurine (6-MP)
Mycophenolate Mofetil

27
Q

What is the function of azathioprine?

A

Purine antagonist

- inhibits conversion of inosine monophosphate to adenine and guanine nucleotides and terminates DNA synthesis

28
Q

What is the function of Mycophenolate mofetil?

A

Inhibits inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase
- an enzyme that catalyses synthesis of guanine nucleotides
Lymphocytes do not have alternative pathways for producing guanine nucleotides
- prevents T-cell proliferation

29
Q

What is a more widely used alternative to Azathioprine?

A

Mycophenolate

30
Q

What is mycophenolate licenced for?

A

Use in renal, liver and heart transplants at oral doses of 1 to 2g twice daily

31
Q

What are the advantages of mycophenolate?

A

Reduces acute rejections from 36% (azathioprine) to 20% (MPA) when used in renal immunosuppressive regiments
Some evidence that chronic rejection is also reduced

32
Q

Why is there less infection risk with mycophenolate compared with azathioprine?

A

Incidence of leukopenia is slightly less than with azathioprine

33
Q

Give examples of steroids used in transplant patients?

A

Methylpredisolone is given at induction to all patients
- IV 500mg to 1g
Prednisolone is used for maintenance (~20mg per day reduced over 3-6 months with a maintenance dose of ~10mg per day)

34
Q

What are the side effects of giving steroids to transplant patients?

A

Cushing’s syndrome
Diabetes
Hyperlipaemia

35
Q

What percentage of patients will suffer an episode of rejection?

A

Approximately 20%

36
Q

What percentage of transplant rejections can be treated successfully?

A

90%

- 2% of all renal transplant patients will suffer rejection that is not treatable

37
Q

How can transplant rejection be diagnosed?

A

Biopsy

Rising creatinine levels

38
Q

What is antithymocyte globulin?

A

Purified gamma globulin (serum of rabbits immunised with human thymocytes)