Conference Coverage

Alternative antirejection regimen is efficacious in pediatric heart transplant


 

FROM AHA 2023

Study supports safety of everolimus regimen

The take-home message is that the everolimus-based regimen, which “is safe in children and young adults when initiated at 6 months after transplant,” can be considered as an alternative to MFF, Dr. Almond concluded.

However, one of the coauthors of the study, Joseph Rossano, MD, chief of the division of cardiology, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, suggested a stronger message.

“These data provide compelling reasons to consider initiation of the combination of everolimus and tacrolimus at 6 months post transplant in pediatric heart transplant recipients,” Dr. Rossano said.

Even though the everolimus-based regimen met the terms of noninferiority overall, patients who received this combination rather than the MMF-based regimen “were less likely to have the combined endpoints of vasculopathy, CKD, rejection and CMV infection. Additionally, they were less likely to make donor specific antibodies,” he said.

He also said that this study challenges the current boxed warning for everolimus. He pointed out that the warning, based on early use of everolimus in adults, does not appear to be an issue for children treated at 6 months.

Early mortality based on infection “was not observed in our study,” he said.

The AHA-invited discussant, Antonio G. Cabrera, MD, division chief of pediatric cardiology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, drew the same conclusions. Based on the study, the everolimus-based regimen can only be described as noninferior to the MMF-based regimen, but Dr. Cabrera listed the same relative advantages as Dr. Rossano, including better kidney function.

Overall, either regimen might be more appealing based on several variables, but Dr. Cabrera said these data suggest everolimus-based treatment “should be considered” as one of two evidence-based options,

Dr. Almond reported no potential financial conflicts of interest. Dr. Rossano reports financial relationships with Abiomed, Bayer, Cytokinetics, Merck, and Myokardia. Dr. Cabrera reported no potential financial conflicts of interest.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Durable LVAD for advanced HF still underutilized
MDedge Cardiology
Trilogy TAVR safe, effective in aortic regurgitation
MDedge Cardiology
Low-risk TAVR studies: Divergent long-term results
MDedge Cardiology
Drug-eluting resorbable scaffold beats angioplasty for infrapopliteal artery disease
MDedge Cardiology
Second pig heart recipient dies
MDedge Cardiology
Drug-coated balloon beats conventional angioplasty for high-risk patients with in-stent restenosis
MDedge Cardiology
Short aspirin therapy noninferior to DAPT for 1 year after PCI for ACS
MDedge Cardiology
Excellent outcome of Ross procedure after 2 decades
MDedge Cardiology
Angioplasty finally proven beneficial in stable angina: ORBITA-2
MDedge Cardiology
AI-ECG gets STEMI patients to cath lab sooner
MDedge Cardiology