Comparison of the efficacy and safety of tacrolimus and low-dose corticosteroid with high-dose corticosteroid for minimal change nephrotic syndrome in adults

  • Ho Jun Chin
  • , Dong Wan Chae
  • , Yong Chul Kim
  • , Won Suk An
  • , Chun Gyoo Ihm
  • , Dong Chan Jin
  • , Sung Gyun Kim
  • , Yong Lim Kim
  • , Yong Soo Kim
  • , Yoon Goo Kim
  • , Ho Seok Koo
  • , Jung Eun Lee
  • , Kang Wook Lee
  • , Jieun Oh
  • , Jung Hwan Park
  • , Hongsi Jiang
  • , Hyuncheol Lee
  • , Sang Koo Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background Tacrolimus is used as a steroid-sparing immunosuppressant in adults with minimal change nephrotic syndrome. However, combined treatment with tacrolimus and low-dose steroid has not been compared with high-dose steroid for induction of clinical remission in a large-scale randomized study. Methods In this 24-week open-label noninferiority study, we randomized 144 adults with minimal change nephrotic syndrome to receive 0.05 mg/kg twice-daily tacrolimus plus once-daily 0.5 mg/kg prednisolone, or once-daily 1 mg/kg prednisolone alone, for up to 8 weeks or until achieving complete remission. Two weeks after complete remission, we tapered the steroid to a maintenance dose of 5-7.5 mg/d in both groups until 24 weeks after study drug initiation. The primary end point was complete remission within 8 weeks (urine protein: creatinine ratio,0.2 g/g). Secondary end points included time until remission and relapse rates (proteinuria and urine protein: creatinine ratio .3.0 g/g) after complete remission to within 24 weeks of study drug initiation. Results Complete remission within 8 weeks occurred in 53 of 67 patients (79.1%) receiving tacrolimus and low-dose steroid and 53 of 69 patients (76.8%) receiving high-dose steroid; this difference demonstrated noninferiority, with an upper confidence limit below the predefined threshold (20%) in both intent-to-treat (11.6%) and per-protocol (17.0%) analyses. Groups did not significantly differ in time until remission. Significantly fewer patients relapsed on maintenance tacrolimus (3-8 ng/ml) plus tapered steroid versus tapered steroid alone (5.7% versus 22.6%, respectively; P50.01). There were no clinically relevant safety differences. Conclusions Combined tacrolimus and low-dose steroid was noninferior to high-dose steroid for complete remission induction in adults with minimal change nephrotic syndrome. Relapse rates were significantly lower with maintenance tacrolimus and steroid compared with steroid alone. No clinically-relevant differences in safety findings were observed.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)199-210
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of the American Society of Nephrology
Volume32
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2021

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