Drug therapy in the heart transplant recipient: part I: cardiac rejection and immunosuppressive drugs.

نویسندگان

  • JoAnn Lindenfeld
  • Geraldine G Miller
  • Simon F Shakar
  • Ronald Zolty
  • Brian D Lowes
  • Eugene E Wolfel
  • Luisa Mestroni
  • Robert L Page
  • Jon Kobashigawa
چکیده

Survival after heart transplantation has improved considerably over the past 20 years. Half of all patients now live 9 years, and 25% live 17 years.1 Currently, 20 000 heart transplant recipients live in the United States.2 Improved longevity means prolonged immunosuppression and the concomitant use of drugs to prevent or treat the long-term complications of immunosuppressive agents, such as infection, obesity, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, renal insufficiency, diabetes, osteoporosis, gout, and malignancies. In 1989, heart transplant recipients surviving 1 year were reported to be taking 16 6 drug doses per day (prescription and nonprescription).3 In 2001, heart transplant recipients surviving an average of 76 months were taking 7 prescription drugs (range, 2 to 14), along with a number of nonprescription drugs.4 Thus, despite prolonged survival, heart transplant recipients continue to take multiple medications. With the large number of heart transplant recipients in the community and the increasing number of immunosuppressive and nonimmunosuppressive drugs used by these patients, it is important that the general cardiologist understand these drugs, their side effects, and the very real potential for drug–drug interactions. These interactions may result in adverse events caused by supratherapeutic and subtherapeutic drug concentrations. In this series, we review mechanisms and types of rejection, immunosuppressive drugs commonly used in the heart transplant recipient, common medical problems after transplantation, and clinically significant drug– drug interactions.

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Circulation

دوره 110 24  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2004