4.5 Article

Is simplification of immunosuppressive medication a way to promote medication adherence of kidney transplant recipients? Findings from a randomized controlled trial

Journal

TRANSPLANT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 34, Issue 9, Pages 1703-1711

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tri.13993

Keywords

fear about rejection; graft rejection; kidney transplantation; medication adherence; tacrolimus

Funding

  1. Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam

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After kidney transplantation, simplification of the immunosuppressive medication regimen can improve medication adherence without affecting fear of rejection.
After kidney transplantation, a strict immunosuppressive medication regimen is necessary for graft survival. However, nonadherence to medication has been shown to occur early after transplantation and to increase over time. Weaning the recipient off dual therapy onto monotherapy in order to reduce immunosuppressive burden may also be a way to promote adherence, although little is known about the impact of such a regimen on fear of rejection. We performed a cohort study on medication adherence and fear of rejection in a randomized, investigator-driven, open-label, single-centre pilot study. Recipients were randomized at 6-months post-transplant to either continue Tacrolimus and Mycophenolate mofetil (TAC/MMF) or to taper MMF at 6 months and discontinue MMF at 9 months (TAC monotherapy). Recipients completed questionnaires about medication adherence and fear of rejection at 6 and 12-months post-transplantation. Medication adherence was significantly higher in the TAC monotherapy group compared to dual TAC/MMF therapy group (chi(2) (1) = 4.582; P = 0.032). We found no difference in fear of rejection between the two groups of recipients (P = 0.887). Simplification of the medication regimen is a potential tool for increasing adherence in clinical practice (Netherlands Trial Register - NL4672).

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