I’ve worked as a transplant surgeon for the last five years. I started in a fairly large regional centre in Voronezh — my wife and I moved to Moscow last year as I began my new job at the Department of Kidney and Pancreas Transplants at the Sklifosovsky Institute. Difficulties with obtaining medical drugs in Russia are the same both in the provinces and in the capital — the situation turned for the worse after the start of the “special military operation.”
I refrained from mentioning the difficulties of acquiring medical equipment necessary to meet modern-day transplantation standards deliberately in my letter as I wished to zero in on the situation with the drugs.
As I started work in 2017-18, I noticed a fairly liberal use of the basic immunosuppressive therapy medicines, such as Prograf and Advagraf, both produced by the Dutch company Astellas Pharma Europe.
As Prograf was becoming less available, it was replaced by the Russian-made drugs, such as Priluxid and Tacrolimus. The number of adverse side effects appearing when taking these Russian-made substances has increased.
Being a short-acting drug, Prograf reaches the target concentration of its active substance in the blood faster, providing an adequate immunosuppressive effect and reducing the risk of organ rejection shortly after transplantation.