Study Shows Steroid Therapies Following Transplant Can Be Eliminated
Steve Woodle, MD, chief of UCs transplant surgery division, principal investigator and designer of the study, says the elimination of a daily dose of steroids following transplantation minimizes chronic health conditions common to kidney transplant recipients.
The datafrom what is believed to be the longest-running, double-blinded study of its kind in the transplant fieldis published in the October issue of the Annals of Surgery.
Steroids have long been the primary source of morbidity and complications following successful kidney transplantation, Woodle says. This study demonstrates that elimination of even small, daily prednisone (pred-ne-zone) doses does not compromise results while minimizing weight gain, diabetes and bone complications.
Corticosteroids were the first anti-rejection drug used in transplant patients, dating back to the first transplant surgeries over 50 years ago.
Traditionally patients who have undergone organ transplantation have required life-long steroid treatments given in combination with other drugs that help suppress the bodys immune system and allow the transplanted organ to function properly.
However, the steroid treatmentgiven as the oral drug, prednisonecan cause serious side effects including cardiovascular disease, high cholesterol and blood pressure, weight gain, diabetes, bone weakness and cataracts.
To test the effectiveness of early steroid elimination, researchers studied 397 patients from 25
The results showed that early steroid elimination caused reduction in many steroid-related complications, even when prednisone was given in very low doses.
Kidney function was similar in both patient groups.
By demonstrating identical kidney transplant survival and function for five years, we now have a scientific basis for offering steroid-free therapies in kidney recipients, Woodle says.
However, he notes that risk of rejection episodes in patients was slightly increased with early steroid discontinuation.
These episodes were mild and easily treated, he says.
He adds that although the five-year kidney transplant survival and function were identical between those who received predisone and those who received other immunosuppressive drugs in this study, it doesnt mean that it will be the same in 10 or 20 years.
Our hope is that with our modern anti-rejection drugs and new drugs being developed, even this small risk of increased rejection combined with longer-term results will not be changed, he says.
The results of this study are now being used in different transplant populations, resulting in much lower prednisone doses or complete elimination with fewer complications.
This study also involved researchers from the
This study was funded by Astellas Pharma
Tags
Related Stories
UC expert weighs in on current MASH treatment approaches
June 5, 2026
As MedCentral recently reported, pending broader pharmacologic approvals for metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH), lifestyle modifications remain the go-to intervention.
At least two weather patterns increase headaches, UC study suggests
June 4, 2026
University of Cincinnati physicians and collaborators identified two specific weather patterns that increase headache and migraine risk and found the preventive medication fremanezumab (Ajovy) can reduce weather‑associated headaches. The findings will be presented at the American Headache Society Annual Scientific Meeting in Orlando.
UC researcher secures $3.3M grant to study microplastics’ impact on heart
June 2, 2026
The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences awarded a $3.3M grant to University of Cincinnati researcher Hong‑Sheng Wang, PhD, to study how microplastics and nanoplastics affect cardiovascular health.