articleNew England Journal of MedicineAug 27, 2003BRONZE OA

Everolimus for the Prevention of Allograft Rejection and Vasculopathy in Cardiac-Transplant Recipients

Temple University · Cleveland Clinic · +7 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Everolimus, a novel proliferation inhibitor and immunosuppressive agent, may suppress cardiac-allograft vasculopathy. We conducted a randomized, double-blind, clinical trial comparing everolimus with azathioprine in recipients of a first heart transplant.

Methods

A total of 634 patients were randomly assigned to receive 1.5 mg of everolimus per day (209 patients), 3.0 mg of everolimus per day (211 patients), or 1.0 to 3.0 mg of azathioprine per kilogram of body weight per day (214 patients), in combination with cyclosporine, corticosteroids, and statins. The primary efficacy end point was a composite of death, graft loss or retransplantation, loss to follow-up, biopsy-proved acute rejection of grade 3A, or rejection with hemodynamic compromise.

Citation impact

1,197
total citations
FWCI
84.27
Percentile
100%
References
40
Citations per year

Authors

12

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Everolimus
  • Medicine
  • Azathioprine
  • Heart transplantation
  • Transplantation
  • Gastroenterology
  • Immunosuppression
  • Internal medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
No related works found for this paper.

Funding