Therapeutic Drug Monitoring of Tacrolimus-Personalized Therapy in Heart Transplantation: New Strategies and Preliminary Results in Endomyocardial Biopsies.
Simona De GregoriAnnalisa De SilvestriBarbara CattadoriAndrea RapagnaniRiccardo AlbertiniElisa NovelloMonica ConcardiEloisa ArbustiniCarlo PellegriniPublished in: Pharmaceutics (2022)
Tacrolimus (TAC) is an immunosuppressant drug approved both in the US and in the EU, widely used for the prophylaxis of organ rejection after transplantation. This is a critical dose drug: low levels in whole blood can lead to low exposure and a high risk of acute rejection, whereas overexposure puts patients at risk for toxicity and infection. Both situations can occur at whole-blood concentrations considered to be within the narrow TAC therapeutic range. We assumed a poor correlation between TAC trough concentrations in whole blood and the incidence of acute rejection; therefore, we propose to study TAC concentrations in endomyocardial biopsies (EMBs). We analyzed 70 EMBs from 18 transplant recipients at five scheduled follow-up visits during the first year post-transplant when closer TAC monitoring is mandatory. We observed five episodes of acute rejection (grade 2R) in three patients (2 episodes at 0.5 months, 2 at 3 months, and 1 at 12 months), when TAC concentrations in EMBs were low (63; 62; 59; 31; 44 pg/mg, respectively), whereas concentrations in whole blood were correct. Our results are preliminary and further studies are needed to confirm the importance of this new strategy to prevent acute rejection episodes.
Keyphrases
- liver failure
- end stage renal disease
- respiratory failure
- drug induced
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- aortic dissection
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- emergency department
- risk factors
- hepatitis b virus
- ultrasound guided
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- acute respiratory distress syndrome