Journal of Transplantation (Jan 2017)

The CECARI Study: Everolimus (Certican®) Initiation and Calcineurin Inhibitor Withdrawal in Maintenance Heart Transplant Recipients with Renal Insufficiency: A Multicenter, Randomized Trial

  • Jan Van Keer,
  • David Derthoo,
  • Olivier Van Caenegem,
  • Michel De Pauw,
  • Eric Nellessen,
  • Nathalie Duerinckx,
  • Walter Droogne,
  • Gábor Vörös,
  • Bart Meyns,
  • Ann Belmans,
  • Stefan Janssens,
  • Johan Van Cleemput,
  • Johan Vanhaecke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/6347138
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2017

Abstract

Read online

In this 3-year, open-label, multicenter study, 57 maintenance heart transplant recipients (>1 year after transplant) with renal insufficiency (eGFR 30–60 mL/min/1.73 m2) were randomized to start everolimus with CNI withdrawal (N=29) or continue their current CNI-based immunosuppression (N=28). The primary endpoint, change in measured glomerular filtration rate (mGFR) from baseline to year 3, did not differ significantly between both groups (+7.0 mL/min in the everolimus group versus +1.9 mL/min in the CNI group, p=0.18). In the on-treatment analysis, the difference did reach statistical significance (+9.4 mL/min in the everolimus group versus +1.9 mL/min in the CNI group, p=0.047). The composite safety endpoint of all-cause mortality, major adverse cardiovascular events, or treated acute rejection was not different between groups. Nonfatal adverse events occurred in 96.6% of patients in the everolimus group and 57.1% in the CNI group (p<0.001). Ten patients (34.5%) in the everolimus group discontinued the study drug during follow-up due to adverse events. The poor adherence to the everolimus therapy might have masked a potential benefit of CNI withdrawal on renal function.