1. Avoiding Tacrolimus Underexposure and Overexposure with a Dosing Algorithm for Renal Transplant Recipients: A Single Arm Prospective Intervention Trial
- Author
-
Francke, M.I. (Marith I.), Andrews, L.M. (Louise), Le, H.L. (Hoang Lan), Wetering, J. (Jacqueline) van de, Clahsen-van Groningen, M.C. (Marian), Gelder, T. (Teun) van, Schaik, R.H.N. (Ron) van, Holt, B. (Bronno) van der, Winter, B.C.M. (Brenda) de, Hesselink, D.A. (Dennis), Francke, M.I. (Marith I.), Andrews, L.M. (Louise), Le, H.L. (Hoang Lan), Wetering, J. (Jacqueline) van de, Clahsen-van Groningen, M.C. (Marian), Gelder, T. (Teun) van, Schaik, R.H.N. (Ron) van, Holt, B. (Bronno) van der, Winter, B.C.M. (Brenda) de, and Hesselink, D.A. (Dennis)
- Abstract
Bodyweight-based tacrolimus dosing followed by therapeutic drug monitoring is standard clinical care after renal transplantation. However, after transplantation, a meager 38% of patients are on target at first steady-state and it can take up to 3 weeks to reach the target tacrolimus predose concentration (C0). Tacrolimus underexposure and overexposure is associated with an increased risk of rejection and drug-related toxicity, respectively. To minimize subtherapeutic and supratherapeutic tacrolimus exposure in the immediate post-transplant phase, a previously developed dosing algorithm to predict an individual’s tacrolimus starting dose was tested prospectively. In this single-arm, prospective, therapeutic i
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF