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
Why is the co-administration of cyclosporin and sirolimus be separated by at least 4 hours?
Cyclosporin can markedly increase oral bioavailability of sirolimus
26
Give two examples of a purine nucleotide modulator
Azathioprine - prodrug which gives rise to 6-mercaptopurine (6-MP) Mycophenolate Mofetil
27
What is the function of azathioprine?
Purine antagonist | - inhibits conversion of inosine monophosphate to adenine and guanine nucleotides and terminates DNA synthesis
28
What is the function of Mycophenolate mofetil?
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
What is a more widely used alternative to Azathioprine?
Mycophenolate
30
What is mycophenolate licenced for?
Use in renal, liver and heart transplants at oral doses of 1 to 2g twice daily
31
What are the advantages of mycophenolate?
Reduces acute rejections from 36% (azathioprine) to 20% (MPA) when used in renal immunosuppressive regiments Some evidence that chronic rejection is also reduced
32
Why is there less infection risk with mycophenolate compared with azathioprine?
Incidence of leukopenia is slightly less than with azathioprine
33
Give examples of steroids used in transplant patients?
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
What are the side effects of giving steroids to transplant patients?
Cushing's syndrome Diabetes Hyperlipaemia
35
What percentage of patients will suffer an episode of rejection?
Approximately 20%
36
What percentage of transplant rejections can be treated successfully?
90% | - 2% of all renal transplant patients will suffer rejection that is not treatable
37
How can transplant rejection be diagnosed?
Biopsy | Rising creatinine levels
38
What is antithymocyte globulin?
Purified gamma globulin (serum of rabbits immunised with human thymocytes)