A heart transplant center experience with basiliximab induction strategies: A double edged sword?
Publication/Presentation Date
4-1-2024
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of induction immunosuppression for heart transplantation (HT) is debated given the uncertain benefit and potential risks of infection and malignancy.
METHODS: This is a retrospective single-center analysis of 475 consecutive HT recipients from 2003 to 2020 grouped by use of induction with basiliximab group (BG) and the no basiliximab group (NBG). Subgroup analysis by era compared pre-2016 standard-basiliximab (BX) induction and 2016-2020 with selective-BX use as part of a calcineurin-inhibitor-sparing regimen.
RESULTS: When adjusted for confounders (sex, age, PRA, eGFR), the BG was less likely to have acute cellular rejection (ACR) (OR.42, p < .001), but had more antibody mediated rejection (AMR) (OR 11.7, p < .001) and more cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV) (OR 3.8, p = .04). There was no difference between BG and NBG in the incidence of malignancies or infections. When stratified by era (pre-2016 vs. 2016-2020), ACR remained less common in the BG than the NBG (36% vs. 50%, p = .045) groups, while AMR remained more common (9.7 vs. 0% p = .005). There was no significant difference in conditional survival comparing pre-and post-2016 NBG (HR 2.20 (95% CI.75-6.43); however, both pre-2016 BG and post-2016 BG have significantly higher mortality (HR 2.37 [95% CI 1.02-5.50) and HR 2.69 (95% CI 1.08-6.71), p = .045 and.03, respectively].
CONCLUSION: Basiliximab reduces the incidence of ACR but increases the risk of AMR, CAV, and may be associated with increased mortality. Mechanistic studies are needed to describe a potential T-cell-escape mechanism with enhanced humoral immunity.
Volume
38
Issue
4
First Page
15307
Last Page
15307
ISSN
1399-0012
Published In/Presented At
Holzhauser, L., Norris, M., Molina, M., Chambers, S., Sundaravel, S., Rashed, E., Gala, K., Fallah, T., Bittermann, T., Reza, N., Wang, T., Atluri, P., Goldberg, L., McLean, R., & Peyster, E. (2024). A heart transplant center experience with basiliximab induction strategies: A double edged sword?. Clinical transplantation, 38(4), e15307. https://doi.org/10.1111/ctr.15307
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
38567897
Department(s)
Department of Surgery
Document Type
Article