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Tacrolimus-Based Immunosuppressive Therapy Influences Sex Hormone Profile in Renal-Transplant Recipients—A Research Study

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Although renal-transplant-recipients can lead much more comfortable life in comparison to patients on dialysis, they need to face other problems. One of them is lifetime immunosuppressive therapy on daily basis. Immunosuppressive regimen contains usually three different drugs and alt...

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Autores principales: Szypulska-Koziarska, Dagmara, Wilk, Aleksandra, Marchelek-Myśliwiec, Małgorzata, Śleboda-Taront, Daria, Wiszniewska, Barbara
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8389270/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34439942
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology10080709
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author Szypulska-Koziarska, Dagmara
Wilk, Aleksandra
Marchelek-Myśliwiec, Małgorzata
Śleboda-Taront, Daria
Wiszniewska, Barbara
author_facet Szypulska-Koziarska, Dagmara
Wilk, Aleksandra
Marchelek-Myśliwiec, Małgorzata
Śleboda-Taront, Daria
Wiszniewska, Barbara
author_sort Szypulska-Koziarska, Dagmara
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Although renal-transplant-recipients can lead much more comfortable life in comparison to patients on dialysis, they need to face other problems. One of them is lifetime immunosuppressive therapy on daily basis. Immunosuppressive regimen contains usually three different drugs and although each one of them is crucial to keep graft in good condition and to suppress immune response against the transplanted organ, they influence, among the other, reproductive system. In current paper we have observed that immunosuppressive therapy based on tacrolimus significantly affected the hormonal balance of sex hormones in both men and women. It is of great importance, as nowadays infertility is rising problem even in health people, therefore more attention should be paid to choose the best suitable immunosuppressive regiment for recipient in reproductive age. ABSTRACT: It is estimated that approximately 20% of couples suffer from infertility worldwide and within renal-transplant recipients, this problem is 10 times more common. An intake of immunosuppressants may lead to hormonal imbalance. The aim of the study was to investigate the influence of tacrolimus-based therapy on the hormonal status of grafted patients. Blood samples were obtained from patients from the Department of Nephrology, Transplantology, and Internal Medicine of Independent Public Clinical Hospital No. 2, Pomeranian Medical University. All 121 patients had stable graft function for over 6 months. The blood plasma concentrations of luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, prolactin, testosterone, estradiol, cortisol were assessed by the electrochemiluminescence method. We observed decreased levels of prolactin (11.9 ng/mL) and cortisol (87.4 μg/mL) in patients under tacrolimus-based therapy. Tacrolimus-based therapy was also associated with increased testosterone and follicle-stimulating hormone in males, 4.04 ng/mL and 6.9 mLU/mL, respectively, and decreased testosterone levels in females, 0.121 ng/mL. We also assessed that immunosuppressive therapy based on tacrolimus is less nephrotoxic in comparison to other regimens. Concluding, tacrolimus-based therapy may influence the hormonal status of transplant recipients in the current study. Results presented here are believed to be helpful for clinicians and patients, especially within the aspect of willingness for biological offspring.
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spelling pubmed-83892702021-08-27 Tacrolimus-Based Immunosuppressive Therapy Influences Sex Hormone Profile in Renal-Transplant Recipients—A Research Study Szypulska-Koziarska, Dagmara Wilk, Aleksandra Marchelek-Myśliwiec, Małgorzata Śleboda-Taront, Daria Wiszniewska, Barbara Biology (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Although renal-transplant-recipients can lead much more comfortable life in comparison to patients on dialysis, they need to face other problems. One of them is lifetime immunosuppressive therapy on daily basis. Immunosuppressive regimen contains usually three different drugs and although each one of them is crucial to keep graft in good condition and to suppress immune response against the transplanted organ, they influence, among the other, reproductive system. In current paper we have observed that immunosuppressive therapy based on tacrolimus significantly affected the hormonal balance of sex hormones in both men and women. It is of great importance, as nowadays infertility is rising problem even in health people, therefore more attention should be paid to choose the best suitable immunosuppressive regiment for recipient in reproductive age. ABSTRACT: It is estimated that approximately 20% of couples suffer from infertility worldwide and within renal-transplant recipients, this problem is 10 times more common. An intake of immunosuppressants may lead to hormonal imbalance. The aim of the study was to investigate the influence of tacrolimus-based therapy on the hormonal status of grafted patients. Blood samples were obtained from patients from the Department of Nephrology, Transplantology, and Internal Medicine of Independent Public Clinical Hospital No. 2, Pomeranian Medical University. All 121 patients had stable graft function for over 6 months. The blood plasma concentrations of luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, prolactin, testosterone, estradiol, cortisol were assessed by the electrochemiluminescence method. We observed decreased levels of prolactin (11.9 ng/mL) and cortisol (87.4 μg/mL) in patients under tacrolimus-based therapy. Tacrolimus-based therapy was also associated with increased testosterone and follicle-stimulating hormone in males, 4.04 ng/mL and 6.9 mLU/mL, respectively, and decreased testosterone levels in females, 0.121 ng/mL. We also assessed that immunosuppressive therapy based on tacrolimus is less nephrotoxic in comparison to other regimens. Concluding, tacrolimus-based therapy may influence the hormonal status of transplant recipients in the current study. Results presented here are believed to be helpful for clinicians and patients, especially within the aspect of willingness for biological offspring. MDPI 2021-07-24 /pmc/articles/PMC8389270/ /pubmed/34439942 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology10080709 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Szypulska-Koziarska, Dagmara
Wilk, Aleksandra
Marchelek-Myśliwiec, Małgorzata
Śleboda-Taront, Daria
Wiszniewska, Barbara
Tacrolimus-Based Immunosuppressive Therapy Influences Sex Hormone Profile in Renal-Transplant Recipients—A Research Study
title Tacrolimus-Based Immunosuppressive Therapy Influences Sex Hormone Profile in Renal-Transplant Recipients—A Research Study
title_full Tacrolimus-Based Immunosuppressive Therapy Influences Sex Hormone Profile in Renal-Transplant Recipients—A Research Study
title_fullStr Tacrolimus-Based Immunosuppressive Therapy Influences Sex Hormone Profile in Renal-Transplant Recipients—A Research Study
title_full_unstemmed Tacrolimus-Based Immunosuppressive Therapy Influences Sex Hormone Profile in Renal-Transplant Recipients—A Research Study
title_short Tacrolimus-Based Immunosuppressive Therapy Influences Sex Hormone Profile in Renal-Transplant Recipients—A Research Study
title_sort tacrolimus-based immunosuppressive therapy influences sex hormone profile in renal-transplant recipients—a research study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8389270/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34439942
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology10080709
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