AI Article Synopsis

  • The Immune Tolerance Network conducted a study (ITN030ST A-WISH) on liver transplant recipients to evaluate the effects of withdrawing immunosuppression in patients with hepatitis C or nonimmune nonviral liver diseases.
  • Of the 275 participants, 95 were randomly assigned to either withdraw immunosuppression (77) or maintain it (18) after 1 to 2 years post-transplant, using specific eligibility criteria.
  • Results showed that while early minimization of immunosuppression is feasible for some patients, complete withdrawal was successful in only a small percentage, and the overall health outcomes between the withdrawal and maintenance groups were inconclusive.

Article Abstract

The Immune Tolerance Network ITN030ST A-WISH assessed immunosuppression withdrawal in liver transplant recipients with hepatitis C or nonimmune nonviral liver disease. Of 275 recipients enrolled before transplantation, 95 were randomly assigned 4:1 to withdrawal (n = 77) or maintenance (n = 18) 1- to 2-years posttransplant. Randomization eligibility criteria included stable immunosuppression monotherapy; adequate liver and kidney function; ≤Stage 2 Ishak fibrosis; and absence of rejection on biopsy. Immunosuppression withdrawal followed an 8-step reduction algorithm with ≥8 weeks per level. Fifty-two of 77 subjects (67.5%) reduced to ≤50% of baseline dose, and 10 of 77 (13.0%) discontinued all immunosuppression for ≥1 year. Acute rejection and/or abnormal liver tests were treated with increased immunosuppression; 5 of 32 rejection episodes required a methylprednisolone bolus. The composite end point (death or graft loss; grade 4 secondary malignancy or opportunistic infection; Ishak stage ≥3; or >25% decrease in glomerular filtration rate within 24 months of randomization) occurred in 12 of 66 (18%) and 4 of 13 (31%) subjects in the withdrawal and maintenance groups. Early immunosuppression minimization is feasible in selected liver recipients, while complete withdrawal is successful in only a small proportion. The composite end point comparison was inconclusive for noninferiority of the withdrawal to the maintenance group.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6482056PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ajt.15205DOI Listing

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