So, this article/take-home message, about the study (and the study itself) I found interesting - and, oh of course, they just had to study the costs savings! The part that was interesting to me was that group of liver transplant people who were studied and followed between 1998 and 2015, who WERE tolerant of taking no immunosuppression drugs! Sort of what SS has been mentioning. C.
Practise Update
Published in Gastroenterology
Journal Scan / Research · October 25, 2018
Longterm Survival and Cost-Effectiveness of Immunosuppression Withdrawal After Liver Transplantation
Liver Transplantation
TAKE-HOME MESSAGE
These are interesting data. The authors evaluated the risk of immunosuppression withdrawal in patients who are perceived to be immune-tolerant. Immunosuppression was withdrawn from appropriately selected patients, and outcomes were compared with patients who remained immunosuppressed.
Overall, graft and patient survival were the same in both groups, and, by withdrawing immunosuppression, there was a significant cost savings over 95 months.
Natasha VonRoenn, MD
Abstract
Lifelong immunosuppression (IS) after liver transplantation is associated with severe adverse effects and increased recipients' morbidity and mortality. Clinical operational tolerance has been reported in up to 40% in very well-selected recipients. Longterm survival and cost savings within the Italian national health system in operational tolerant recipients is reported. Seventy-five liver recipients were enrolled for IS withdrawal at our institution during the period from April 1998 to December 2015. The study population comprised 32 (42.7%) tolerant patients; 41 (54.7%) nontolerant patients needing uptake of IS after clinical or biopsy-proven rejection; and 2 (2.7%) immediate nontolerant patients who developed early rejection after the first drug reduction. The primary endpoint of the study was to assess the longterm patients and graft outcome; the secondary endpoint was the assessment of cost savings in the context of IS withdrawal. The follow-up was 95.0 months (interquartile range, 22.5-108.5 months). IS withdrawal did not result in patient nor graft loss and resulted in a major cost savings reaching about (euro symbol?) 630,000.In conclusion, longterm IS withdrawal represents a remarkable cost savings in the health care of liver recipients without exposing them to graft loss.
Longterm Survival and Cost-Effectiveness of Immunosuppression Withdrawal After Liver Transplantation
Liver Transpl. 2018 Sep 01;24(9)1199-1208, T Maria Manzia, R Angelico, L Toti, C Angelico, C Quaranta, A Parente, F Blasi, S Iesari, D Sforza, L Baiocchi, J Lerut, G Tisone
So, this article/take-home message, about the study (and the study itself) I found interesting - and, oh of course, they just had to study the costs savings! The part that was interesting to me was that group of liver transplant people who were studied and followed between 1998 and 2015, who WERE tolerant of taking no immunosuppression drugs! Sort of what SS has been mentioning. C.
Practise Update
Journal Scan / Research · October 25, 2018
Longterm Survival and Cost-Effectiveness of Immunosuppression Withdrawal After Liver Transplantation
TAKE-HOME MESSAGE
These are interesting data. The authors evaluated the risk of immunosuppression withdrawal in patients who are perceived to be immune-tolerant. Immunosuppression was withdrawn from appropriately selected patients, and outcomes were compared with patients who remained immunosuppressed.
Abstract
Lifelong immunosuppression (IS) after liver transplantation is associated with severe adverse effects and increased recipients' morbidity and mortality. Clinical operational tolerance has been reported in up to 40% in very well-selected recipients. Longterm survival and cost savings within the Italian national health system in operational tolerant recipients is reported. Seventy-five liver recipients were enrolled for IS withdrawal at our institution during the period from April 1998 to December 2015. The study population comprised 32 (42.7%) tolerant patients; 41 (54.7%) nontolerant patients needing uptake of IS after clinical or biopsy-proven rejection; and 2 (2.7%) immediate nontolerant patients who developed early rejection after the first drug reduction. The primary endpoint of the study was to assess the longterm patients and graft outcome; the secondary endpoint was the assessment of cost savings in the context of IS withdrawal. The follow-up was 95.0 months (interquartile range, 22.5-108.5 months). IS withdrawal did not result in patient nor graft loss and resulted in a major cost savings reaching about (euro symbol?) 630,000.In conclusion, longterm IS withdrawal represents a remarkable cost savings in the health care of liver recipients without exposing them to graft loss.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Additional Info
Longterm Survival and Cost-Effectiveness of Immunosuppression Withdrawal After Liver Transplantation
Liver Transpl. 2018 Sep 01;24(9)1199-1208, T Maria Manzia, R Angelico, L Toti, C Angelico, C Quaranta, A Parente, F Blasi, S Iesari, D Sforza, L Baiocchi, J Lerut, G Tisone