Abstract
Aims: Calcineurin inhibitors (CNI) have a small therapeutic window, and drug monitoring is required. Pharmacokinetic monitoring does not correlate sufficiently with clinical outcome. Therefore, the expression of nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT)-regulated genes in the peripheral blood has been suggested as a potentially useful immune monitoring tool to optimize CNI therapy. NFAT-regulated gene expression (RGE) was evaluated in renal allograft recipients as predictive biomarker to detect patients at risk of acute rejection or infections. Methods: NFAT-RGE (interleukin-2, interferon-γ, granular-macrophage colony-stimulating factor) was evaluated by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction in whole blood samples at day 7, day 14, month 1, 3, and 6 after transplantation in 64 de novo renal allograft recipients from 3 European centres. Immunosuppression consisted of tacrolimus (Tac), mycophenolic acid, and corticosteroids. Results: Tac concentrations (C0 and C1.5) correlated inversely with NFAT-RGE (P <30%) showed a higher incidence of viral complications, especially cytomegalovirus and BK virus replication (52.5 vs. 10%, P =.01). Conclusions: NFAT-RGE was confirmed as a potential noninvasive early predictive biomarker in the immediate post-transplant period to detect patients at risk of acute rejection and infectious complications in Tac-treated renal allograft recipients. Monitoring of NFAT-RGE may provide additional useful information for physicians to achieve individualized Tac treatment.
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Sommerer, C., Brunet, M., Budde, K., Millán, O., Guirado Perich, L., Glander, P., … Giese, T. (2021). Monitoring of gene expression in tacrolimus-treated de novo renal allograft recipients facilitates individualized immunosuppression: Results of the IMAGEN study. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 87(10), 3851–3862. https://doi.org/10.1111/bcp.14794
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