Smooth muscle–specific actin levels in the urine of renal transplant recipients: Correlation with cyclosporine or tacrolimus nephrotoxicity

1999 
Abstract Cyclosporine A (CSA) and tacrolimus (FK506) are powerful immunosuppressive agents that have proven useful for antirejection therapy in patients with solid organ transplants, including kidney. However, both drugs are nephrotoxic, each producing similar histological patterns of injury to renal tubules and preglomerular arterioles, and this toxicity is a major cause of renal allograft dysfunction. A renal transplant biopsy presently represents the most reliable means of diagnosing nephrotoxicity caused by CSA or tacrolimus and distinguishing it from acute rejection. Because CSA and tacrolimus nephrotoxicity often involve arteriolar smooth muscle, whereas vascular smooth muscle is rarely involved in acute rejection, we investigated if the appearance of a smooth muscle–specific isoform of α-actin (SMA) in the urine of renal transplant recipients about to undergo a biopsy for graft dysfunction correlated with biopsy evidence of CSA or tacrolimus toxicity. Eighty-nine urine samples from 61 patients, plus 6 samples from healthy control subjects, were analyzed in a blinded manner by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using a specific anti-SMA monoclonal antibody. For the patient samples, the results of these assays were then correlated with the biopsy findings. Those 40 cases in which the biopsy showed evidence of CSA or tacrolimus nephrotoxicity had a significantly ( P
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