Induction immunosuppression and post-transplant diabetes mellitus: a propensity-matched cohort study

Author:

Gupta Suruchi K.,Mostofsky Elizabeth,Motiwala Shweta R.,Hage Ali,Mittleman Murray A.

Abstract

IntroductionPost-transplant diabetes mellitus (PTDM) is a common complication among cardiac transplant recipients, causing diabetes-related complications and death. While certain maintenance immunosuppressive drugs increase PTDM risk, it is unclear whether induction immunosuppression can do the same. Therefore, we evaluated whether induction immunosuppression with IL-2 receptor antagonists, polyclonal anti-lymphocyte antibodies, or Alemtuzumab given in the peri-transplant period is associated with PTDM.MethodsWe used the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients database to conduct a cohort study of US adults who received cardiac transplants between January 2008-December 2018. We excluded patients with prior or multiple organ transplants and those with a history of diabetes, resulting in 17,142 recipients. We created propensity-matched cohorts (n=7,412) using predictors of induction immunosuppression and examined the association between post-transplant diabetes and induction immunosuppression by estimating hazard ratios using Cox proportional-hazards models.ResultsIn the propensity-matched cohort, the average age was 52.5 (SD=13.2) years, 28.7% were female and 3,706 received induction immunosuppression. There were 867 incident cases of PTDM during 26,710 person-years of follow-up (32.5 cases/1,000 person-years). There was no association between induction immunosuppression and post-transplant diabetes (Hazard Ratio= 1.04, 95% confidence interval 0.91 – 1.19). Similarly, no associations were observed for each class of induction immunosuppression agents and post-transplant diabetes.ConclusionThe use of contemporary induction immunosuppression in cardiac transplant patients was not associated with post-transplant diabetes.

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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