Kidney International Reports (Feb 2022)

One-Year Outcomes of the Multi-Center StudY to Transplant Hepatitis C-InfeCted kidneys (MYTHIC) Trial

  • Meghan Elizabeth Sise,
  • David Seth Goldberg,
  • Douglas Earl Schaubel,
  • Robert J. Fontana,
  • Jens J. Kort,
  • Rita R. Alloway,
  • Christine M. Durand,
  • Emily A. Blumberg,
  • E. Steve Woodle,
  • Kenneth E. Sherman,
  • Robert S. Brown, Jr.,
  • John J. Friedewald,
  • Niraj M. Desai,
  • Samuel T. Sultan,
  • Josh Levitsky,
  • Meghan D. Lee,
  • Ian A. Strohbehn,
  • J. Richard Landis,
  • Melissa Fernando,
  • Jenna L. Gustafson,
  • Raymond T. Chung,
  • Peter Philip Reese

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
pp. 241 – 250

Abstract

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Introduction: Transplanting kidneys from hepatitis C virus (HCV) viremic donors into HCV-negative patients (HCV D-RNA-positive/R-negative) has evolved from experimental to “standard-of-care” at many centers. Nevertheless, most data derive from single centers and provide only short-term follow-up. Methods: The Multicenter Study to Transplant Hepatitis C-Infected Kidneys (MYTHIC) study was a multicenter (7 sites) trial of HCV D-RNA-positive/R-negative kidney transplantation (KT) followed by 8 weeks of glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (G/P) initiated 2 to 5 days post-KT. Prespecified outcomes included probability of KT (vs. matched waitlist comparators) and 1-year safety outcomes, allograft function, and survival. Results: Among 63 enrolled patients, 1-year cumulative incidence of KT was approximately 3.5-fold greater for the MYTHIC cohort versus 2055 matched United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) comparators who did not opt-in to receive a kidney from an HCV-viremic donor (68% vs. 19%, P < 0.0001). Of 30 HCV D-RNA-positive/R-negative KT recipients, all achieved HCV cure. None developed clinically significant liver disease or HCV-related kidney injury. Furthermore, 1-year survival was 93% and 1-year graft function was excellent (median creatinine 1.17; interquartile range [IQR]: 1.02–1.38 mg/dl). There were 4 cases of cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease among 10 CMV-negative patients transplanted with a kidney from an HCV-viremic/CMV-positive donor. Conclusion: The 1-year findings from this multicenter trial suggest that opting-in for HCV-viremic KT offers can increase probability of KT with excellent 1-year outcomes. Trial Registration: NCT03781726

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