Most prednisone-free programs require the patient to undergo a preliminary induction treatment with dangerous anti-CD molecule immunosuppressives at the time of the transplant, so it is difficult to switch to a prednisone-free regimen if you have not had the induction therapy. However, you can be taken off prednisone entirely even without that initial treatment, though that switch will cause a 25% chance of acute rejection. You will have to be monitored for rejection very closely for a month or so after stopping the prednisone, and even if they catch and stop a rejection early, you have to keep in mind that if the kidney experiences a rejection episode at any time, this will reduce the likely lifespan of the kidney.
Quote from: stauffenberg on May 03, 2008, 07:00:32 PMMost prednisone-free programs require the patient to undergo a preliminary induction treatment with dangerous anti-CD molecule immunosuppressives at the time of the transplant, so it is difficult to switch to a prednisone-free regimen if you have not had the induction therapy. However, you can be taken off prednisone entirely even without that initial treatment, though that switch will cause a 25% chance of acute rejection. You will have to be monitored for rejection very closely for a month or so after stopping the prednisone, and even if they catch and stop a rejection early, you have to keep in mind that if the kidney experiences a rejection episode at any time, this will reduce the likely lifespan of the kidney.What induction therapy?Long term prednisone use damages the kidney too.
Thanks for all of your comments. I'm also curious about the induction therapy. I presume this is done when you have a living donor and know ahead of time you are getting a kidney?
Induction therapy involves giving drugs from the class of anti-CD molecules intravenously around the time of the transplant. It is quite expensive; requires intensive medical supervision because sometiimes patients have a major reaction to the medication and their breathing can just shut down; but it very powerfully suppresses the immune system. The many drugs based on anti-CD molecules are easily identified by the fact that they all end in the suffix -mab. The major disadvantage of induction therapy, despite allowing prednisone-free regimens and helping patients accept incompatible organs for transplant. is that it causes a very high rate of lympathic cancer over the years following the transplant, which is extremely difficult to treat successfully.Prenisone is not a nephrotoxin like most of the classic calcineuron inhibitors (i.e., cyclosporine and its family), but would only very indirectly harm the kidney by raising blood pressure and causing diabetes.
Yes, that is also one of the monoclonal anti-CD antibodies. But it causes no increased risk of lymphoma, and has in fact been used to treat lymphoma. It has other negative side effects, though, but most of these occur only with the initiation of therapy.
Sorry -- this might be a thread-hijack!If you're known to have had steroid-induced diabetes, would they be less likely to use a steroid regiment for a transplant? I'm still pre-ESRD, but I've considered refusing a transplant just because of the steroids. I was on prednisone to treat my FSGS a few years ago and ended up in the hospital with a blood sugar level of 1500 (that's not a typo). They were surprised to see me walk in under my own power.
I just had my three month check up with my neph at the transplant center two days ago. He took me off Bactrim and my trouches. I am at 5mg of prednisone, I will continue this dose for the rest of my life. My blood sugars have been high, I give myself a long lasting insulin shot at night, I had been giving myself four shots a day, it's slowly getting easier.
Chris, trouches are lozenges used to threat thrush. I think most of the time they use Nystatin that you have to swish around and swallowed. The lozenges are sucked, dissolved in the mouth, and swallowed. Hope this helps.