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BACKGROUND: Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) has increasingly replaced azathioprine (AZA) as the antimetabolite of choice in immunosuppressive protocols. Initial trials comparing MMF with AZA in patients receiving cyclosporine A sandimmune showed a clinical benefit in reducing the incidence of acute rejections. It has been questioned whether this benefit remains significant when using newer formulations of cyclosporine A (neoral) and tacrolimus. METHODS: Literature searches were performed using the Transplant Library, Cochrane library, Medline, and Embase for all randomized controlled trials directly comparing MMF with AZA in renal transplant recipients. Trials were assessed for quality using the Jadad scoring system. Trials were pooled using meta-analysis software. Confidence intervals were set at 95%. RESULTS: Nineteen relevant studies were identified, including a total of 3143 patients. MMF significantly reduces the risk of acute rejection when used in combination with any calcineurin inhibitor (relative risk 0.62, 0.55-0.87, P<0.00001). The hazard for graft loss, including death with a functioning graft, is also significantly reduced in patients treated with MMF (hazard ratio 0.76, 0.59-0.98, P=0.037). There is no significant difference in patient survival or renal transplant function between groups. Risk of adverse events, including cytomegalovirus infection, anemia, leukopenia or rates of malignancy, does not differ significantly. A greater risk of diarrhea is seen in MMF-treated patients. CONCLUSIONS: We have shown that MMF used with a calcineurin inhibitor does indeed confer a clinical benefit over AZA by reducing the risk of acute rejection and also possibly reducing graft loss. This effect is independent of whether MMF is used in combination with sandimmune, neoral or tacrolimus.

Original publication

DOI

10.1097/TP.0b013e3181952623

Type

Journal article

Journal

Transplantation

Publication Date

27/03/2009

Volume

87

Pages

785 - 794

Keywords

Acute Disease, Azathioprine, Graft Rejection, Graft Survival, Humans, Immunosuppressive Agents, Kidney Transplantation, Mycophenolic Acid, Proportional Hazards Models, Risk Factors