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Immunosuppression in the elderly renal allograft recipient: a systematic review

Nuria Montero, María José Pérez-Sáez, Julio Pascual, Daniel Abramowicz, Klemens Budde, Chris Dudley, Mark Hazzan, Marian Klinger, Umberto Maggiore, Rainer Oberbauer, Julio Pascual, Soren S Sorensen, Ondrej Viklicky, DESCARTES Working Group

    26 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND: The Elderly are the fastest growing part of kidney transplant recipients. The best immunosuppressive strategy is unknown.

    METHODS: We performed a systematic search of randomized controlled trials and observational studies focused on safety and efficacy of different immunosuppression strategies in elderly kidney recipients. Data extraction and risk of bias evaluation were systematically performed.

    RESULTS: Ten studies were included: 2 randomized clinical trials and 8 observational. A marginal benefit was found for early renal function with delayed tacrolimus or complete tacrolimus avoidance using mycophenolate mofetil (MMF). Observational cohort studies looked at different antibody induction strategies, calcineurin-inhibitors based maintenance immunosuppression, calcineurin-inhibitor-free sirolimus-based therapy and use of MMF versus azathioprine. Treatment with interleukin-2 receptor antibody induction, calcineurin-inhibitor minimization with MMF and steroid minimization is advisable in the low immunologic risk elderly recipient, considering the increased risk of toxicities, infection and malignancies. In the high immunologic risk elderly recipient, taking into account the morbid consequences of acute rejection in the elderly, observational studies support antibody induction with depletive antibodies, calcineurin-inhibitor, MMF and steroids; calcineurin-inhibitor-minimization is not recommended.

    CONCLUSIONS: There is very limited evidence for the benefits and harms of different immunosuppression strategies in the elderly. Most of the published literature are observational studies, and randomized controlled trials are urgently needed.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalTransplantation reviews (Orlando, Fla.)
    Volume30
    Issue number3
    Pages (from-to)144-53
    Number of pages10
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jul 2016

    Keywords

    • Journal Article
    • Review

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