MooseMom thanks yes that’s Mycophenolic acid. Another person on the Facebook group posted a link that made it clear.
Quote from: iolaire on March 15, 2021, 09:35:53 AMMooseMom thanks yes that’s Mycophenolic acid. Another person on the Facebook group posted a link that made it clear.OK, good. I didn't want to lead anyone astray.Upon thinking about all of this a bit more, I'm more than disappointed. I'm gutted. I have tried, and mostly succeeded, in holding back my despair for a year now. That particular dam now has an enormous crack in it. I don't dare hope that the second dose will be any more promising than the first. I really don't see anything being done for us. I think we will be abandoned.
I was supposed to have a meeting with the tx team about the vaccine (my GP requested I do it), but now I am like, why bother?
Still get in line to receive it and be proud of picking and choosing if you have a choice. On the Facebook one person says they see better response after the second shot, where another says he talked to his transplant team with numerous people in the study and they said it doesn't look good but he was told age has a big factor. There are all kinds of unknows. For example we know the vaccine doesn't always prevent infection but some studies show that infection in vaccinated populations result in less significant effects.
You Tea, let us know what your tx team has to say. And I agree with iolaire; if the Moderna vaccine gives you even the slightest increase in protection, you shop for it. It's no one else's business, and you owe an explanation to no one besides your medical team.
Kristina, the Johns Hopkins study to which iolaire is referring doesn't look at the safety of the vaccine, rather, it looks at the efficacy of it in transplant patients. This is the study we've all been waiting to read. Basically, the conclusion is that for transplant patients who are taking the immunosuppressant mycophenolic acid (Myfortic) or any other immunosuppressant in this drug group (antimetabolic immunosuppressant), after the first dose of the mRNA vaccine, there seems to be no real measurable antibody response. That may change after the second dose. This study was published just today, so we are all still digesting it. It doesn't look like the vaccine protects us much at all, IF at all, at least not after the first dose. It's very disappointing.
How often do transplant patients receive steroid injections or pills? And what is the size of the dose, compared, say, to a cortisone shot in the wrist for a mild case of osteo? The wrist shot, given every three months, is a small, localized dose, but I'm guessing that transplant patients receive larger and more frequent doses. Is this correct?In any case, I sympathize with the quandry you are in. But don't despair too soon. The second shot may provide adequate protection.
Typically (at least what I experienced in the early days and what I hear from others) it is a maintenance dose of 5 mg of prednisone per day.
Quote from: UkrainianTracksuit on March 16, 2021, 05:54:37 AMTypically (at least what I experienced in the early days and what I hear from others) it is a maintenance dose of 5 mg of prednisone per day. I'm at 5 mg and talked to my doctor about it last year. He made some comment that people still on prednisone fare better transplant wise. I do have weakening of the bones as seen on DexaScans and have had that since the 1990's when my lupus was active and I was on high doses of prednisone.FYI I should get my second antibody test for this study on the 25th before my second shot and will have the results in a day or so.
I'm at 5 mg and talked to my doctor about it last year. He made some comment that people still on prednisone fare better transplant wise. I do have weakening of the bones as seen on DexaScans and have had that since the 1990's when my lupus was active and I was on high doses of prednisone.FYI I should get my second antibody test for this study on the 25th before my second shot and will have the results in a day or so.
I am just a peripheral member of the Krappy Kidney Klub, but I very much appreciate the dissemination of this information.