sirolimus has been researched along with Nephrosclerosis* in 1 studies
1 other study(ies) available for sirolimus and Nephrosclerosis
Article | Year |
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Sirolimus-induced thrombotic microangiopathy in a renal transplant recipient.
A rare but well-documented serious adverse reaction to the administration of the calcineurin inhibitors tacrolimus and cyclosporine in renal transplant recipients is the development of medication-induced thrombotic microangiopathy. The recently introduced immunosuppressive medication sirolimus has a very similar molecular structure to tacrolimus and also binds to the same intracellular proteins. Despite these similarities with tacrolimus, sirolimus has a different side-effect profile and reportedly lacks documented specific renal toxicity. This is a case report of the isolated administration of sirolimus without a concomitant calcineurin inhibitor being associated with the development of renal transplant biopsy-proven thrombotic microangiopathy. The patient is a 47-year-old African-American woman whose primary cause of renal failure was not thrombotic micrangiopathy, and she received a 5-antigen mismatched cadaveric renal transplant. Because of preexisting nephrosclerosis in the renal transplant, this patient was never administered a calcineurin inhibitor but was always maintained on sirolimus. With recent animal data showing that sirolmus can be nephrotoxic in a renal ischemic-reperfusion model (similar to what happens with a renal transplant), the authors speculate on a mechanism for this adverse reaction. Topics: Adult; Female; Humans; Hypertension; Immunosuppressive Agents; Kidney; Kidney Failure, Chronic; Kidney Transplantation; Kidney Tubular Necrosis, Acute; Middle Aged; Nephrosclerosis; Postoperative Complications; Sirolimus; Smoking; Thrombosis; Tissue Donors; Transplantation; Vascular Diseases | 2003 |