Immunoauppresive Drugs for Renal Transplantation
Journal: International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (Vol.3, No. 2)Publication Date: 2019-21-1
Authors : Neha Sharma;
Page : 561-572
Keywords : immunosuppresants; kidney transplantation; induction therapy; maintenance therapy; Calcineurin inhibitors (CNI): Cyclosporine (CsA) and Tacrolimus (Tac);
Abstract
For most patients with chronic kidney failure, kidney transplantation has the greatest potential for restoring a healthy and productive life. The risk of acute rejection is the highest in the first months after transplantation induction phase and diminishes afterwards maintenance phase . Immunosuppression should be at the highest level in the early period and reduced for long-term therapy. At present, conventional immunosuppressive protocols consist of the triple therapy a calcineurin inhibitor, an adjunctive agent, corticosteroids. The development of new immunosuppressives drugs is aimed not only at improving short-term outcomes, but also achieving better safety, less nephrotoxicity and minimal side effects. Suppression of allograft rejection is the central issue in renal transplantation RT . Thus, development of immunosuppressive agents is the key for successful allograft function. Immunosuppression agents in RT have evolved over the last six decades beginning with total lymphoid irradiation to the currently available immunosuppressive strategies, which have significantly reduced the incidence of acute rejection episodes and improved short-term graft and patient outcomes. However their use is associated with long-term graft dysfunction, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, diabetes mellitus, infections and malignancies. Chronic antibody-mediated rejection and chronic allograft dysfunction still remain the major problems, often leading to graft loss and shortened long-term graft survival. Immunosuppressive agents are used for induction, maintenance and reversal of established rejection. The use of multidrug regimen tailored to the immunological risk of patient and adverse-effect profile of the drug provides the optimum outcomes. This review focuses on the evolution of immunosuppression agents used in RT over last six decades and highlights the newer agents under investigation. Neha Sharma "Immunoauppresive Drugs for Renal Transplantation" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-3 | Issue-2 , February 2019, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd21413.pdf
Other Latest Articles
Last modified: 2019-05-23 15:40:37