Organ transplant recipients who currently take multiple pills every day might someday be able to substitute a monthly treatment, a small study suggests.
Along with improved convenience, the new treatment might also reduce side effects and prolong survival of the transplanted organ, researchers said in the American Journal of Transplantation.
Standard immunosuppressants can cause diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, and side effects such as fatigue, muscle weakness, sexual dysfunction, hair loss, and trouble sleeping.
In a mid-stage study, 23 kidney recipients received infusions of Bristol Myers Squibb's Nulojix and Amgen’s experimental drug dazodalibep monthly for four months.
These drugs disrupt the immune system's attack on the new organ but do not affect non-immune cells the way standard treatment does, according to the report.
Patients also received standard immunosuppressants for the first 28 days.
Two of the first three patients experienced temporary cases of organ rejection. Drug frequency and dosing were revised for the remaining patients, 13 of whom completed the study.
Seven patients withdrew due to acute kidney rejection, side effects, or for unspecified reasons. None of the rejection episodes were due to the harder-to-treat form known as antibody-mediated rejection, the researchers said.
They now intend to test the regimen in a larger pool of kidney recipients.
“We hope that most patients can be spared the toxic effects of immunosuppressants, which would be reserved for those with certain high-risk factors,” study leader Dr. Allan Kirk of Duke University School of Medicine in North Carolina said in a statement.