Michler R E, Smith C R, Drusin R E, Reison D S, Hickey T J, Lamb J, Reemtsma K, Rose E A
Circulation. 1986 Nov;74(5 Pt 2):III68-71.
Although cyclosporine has decreased the severity of acute cardiac transplant rejection, most centers have continued to use high-dose intravenous steroids to treat acute rejection. To minimize the morbidity of antirejection therapy, acute rejection episodes in 37 cardiac transplant recipients were treated prospectively with only a boost of oral prednisone. Cyclosporine was continued at the same maintenance dose while oral prednisone was increased to 100 mg/day for 3 days, then rapidly tapered over 1 week to the maintenance dose. Seventy-six of 85 acute rejection episodes (90%) showed histologic resolution of mycocyte necrosis on repeat biopsy. Three acute rejection episodes (3.5%) resolved only after "rescue therapy" with intravenous steroid, and an additional three episodes (3.5%) required the combination of intravenous steroid and rabbit antithymocyte globulin to effect resolution. In addition, three acute rejection episodes (3.5%) resulted in graft loss. This was fatal in two patients and one patient underwent successful retransplantation. Oral steroid therapy alone is adequate therapy for most acute rejection episodes in cyclosporine-treated heart transplant recipients, and low infectious morbidity and mortality has been associated with this antirejection protocol.