Background: In kidney-transplant recipients, leflunomide has been shown to be efficient for treating polyomavirus BK virus-associated-nephropathy (PVAN). However, it is unknown whether the beneficial effect of leflunomide is related to it having a lower immunosuppressive effect than mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), or to its anti-viral activity. The aim of this study was to assess i) T-cell functions before and after conversion from MMF to leflunomide in kidney-transplant patients with PVAN, and ii) effects of leflunomide on PVAN outcome.
Patients And Methods: Twelve patients were enrolled in this study. At PVAN diagnosis, MMF was replaced by leflunomide. Other immunosuppressive drug doses and levels were maintained unchanged. T-cell functions, i.e., intralymphocyte cytokine expression (IL-2 and TNF-alpha), T-cell activation [i.e., transferrin receptor (CD71) and interleukin (IL)-2 alpha-chain (CD25) expression], and T-cell proliferation were measured using a flow-cytometry whole-blood assay before and at one month after conversion.
Results: Despite a slight decrease in tacrolimus trough levels, no significant change in T-cell-function biomarkers was observed after conversion. After a follow-up of 6 (4-30) months, five patients were cleared of the virus, and decreased viral load was observed in four patients. Only one patient suffered a graft loss. No difference in immunological parameters was observed between patients who were cleared or not of BKV.
Conclusion: Results of this pilot study suggest that the potential benefits of leflunomide to treat PVAN in kidney-transplant patients is not related to reduced immunosuppression induced by replacing MMF by leflunomide. Virological studies are required to determine the anti-BKV effect of leflunomide.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.intimp.2009.05.004 | DOI Listing |
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