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Introduction: Lipid disorders are frequent after kidney transplantation (KT) and KT recipients are considered at high- or very-high cardiovascular risk. Among many concurring factors, a major role is played by immunosuppressants.Areas covered: General measures to manage lipid disorders first include physical activity and diet counseling. Modulating the doses of immunosuppressants also improves dyslipidemia. When lipid-lowering drugs are necessary to control elevated plasma cholesterol and/or triglycerides, statins are the cornerstone for managing hypercholesterolemia. However, side-effects (e.g. myopathy, new-onset diabetes, and kidney graft dysfunction) may occur. In these cases, ezetimibe (which does not affect kidney function) alone or on top of statins for the severe cases, is suggested by the most recent Guidelines. Proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type9 inhibitors are promising but expensive and their use in KT is still limited.Expert opinion: In KT recipients, statins should be used cautiously. Rather than using high-dose statin in difficult patients, an association with ezetimibe is suggested. While fibrates, niacin, and resins do not play a relevant role due to their erratic efficacy and common side-effects, new lipid-lowering drugs are emerging but their safety and efficacy in KT patients still need to be assessed.

Citation

Claudio Ponticelli, Lorenzo Arnaboldi, Gabriella Moroni, Alberto Corsini. Treatment of dyslipidemia in kidney transplantation. Expert opinion on drug safety. 2020 Mar;19(3):257-267

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PMID: 32073914

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