Treatment Trials

182 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions

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ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Validation of Genomic Immune-phenotyping Profiles to Predict Risk of Kidney Transplant Rejection
Description

Global, non-randomized, observational study for the validation of Verici Dx genomic tests to predict risk of kidney clinical and subclinical acute rejection, and chronic allograft damage or interstitial fibrosis / tubular atrophy by correlating peripheral blood gene expression profiles with graft injury (e.g. cellular / antibody-mediated), rejection and death censored graft loss.

COMPLETED
Contrast Enhanced Ultrasonography to Detect Human Renal Transplant Rejection
Description

The purpose of this study is to determine the feasibility and efficacy of detecting kidney transplant rejection using contrast enhance ultrasonography with the contrast agent Sonazoid.

COMPLETED
Imaging Kidney Transplant Rejection Using Ferumoxytol-Enhanced Magnetic Resonance
Description

The goal of this study is to develop a non-invasive imaging test for in vivo detection of kidney transplant rejection. The hypotheses are that 1) Ferumoxytol-MRI can generate accurate estimates of tissue iron concentrations and tissue macrophages. 2) The signal given by a renal allograft on Ferumoxytol-MRI demonstrates significant differences between rejected and non-rejected transplants.

UNKNOWN
Evaluating Safety and Efficacy of TOL101 Induction Versus Anti-Thymocyte Globulin to Prevent Kidney Transplant Rejection
Description

Induction therapy with antibodies is administered during transplant surgery and for a short period of time following transplant surgery in an effort to render the immune system less able to mount an initial rejection response. In general, induction therapy is associated with better outcomes compared to the absence of induction therapy. However, currently used induction agents, some of which are not labeled or indicated for induction therapy in transplantation, have drawbacks related to long-term immune system suppression increasing susceptibility to opportunistic infections or malignancies, and other immune-mediated side effects. An unmet medical need exists for a more specific approach to prevent acute organ rejection, without unnecessarily exposing the patient to non-specific or open-ended immune suppression, which may exacerbate the risks of infections and malignancies. TOL101 is a novel antibody that targets a very specific immune cell type that is critical in the acute organ rejection response. In this two-part study, TOL101 will be evaluated for the prophylaxis of acute organ rejection when used as part of an immunosuppressive regimen that includes steroids, MMF, and tacrolimus in first time kidney transplant recipients. This study will test the hypothesis that a more specific approach (with TOL101) to prevention of acute organ rejection may provide similar or better efficacy than the currently used induction antibodies (such as Anti-Thymocyte Globulin or Thymoglobulin) while carrying fewer risks in terms of opportunistic infections, malignancies and adverse effects.

COMPLETED
Combined Kidney and Bone Marrow Transplantation to Prevent Kidney Transplant Rejection
Description

In small initial studies, combined kidney and bone marrow transplants from the same donor have permitted some individuals to stop taking anti-rejection medicines without rejecting their transplant. This clinical trial will study this method in a greater number of people to determine if it is indeed effective and safe.

COMPLETED
Rituximab for Pediatric Renal Transplant Rejection
Description

Rituximab will be tested for its safety and potential efficacy in treating B cell dense renal allograft rejection episodes in children receiving renal transplants at Stanford University

COMPLETED
Urine Testing to Detect Kidney Transplant Rejection
Description

The purpose of this study is to determine if analysis of urine samples for specific markers can predict transplant rejection in people who have received kidney transplants.

COMPLETED
A Study to Evaluate the Effect of Thymoglobulin and Reduced Doses of Steroids to Prevent Renal Transplant Rejection
Description

This study involves the use of a drug called Thymoglobulin, which is approved in the US to treat kidney transplant rejection and in Canada to treat and to prevent kidney transplant rejection. This study will evaluate the effect of Thymoglobulin and reduced doses of steroids to prevent renal transplant rejection and will provide a basis for future evaluations of Thymoglobulin as an immunosuppressive agent to help prevent renal transplant rejection. Subjects meeting all inclusion and exclusion criteria are eligible to participate in this study. In addition to standard treatment, study participants will receive either Thymoglobulin with rapid discontinuation of steroids or steroids per hospital standards for at least the first 90 days after transplant. The treatment assignment is random and is not chosen by the subject or their physician. Subjects will be monitored during treatment with Thymoglobulin and during the transplant hospitalization. Additional subject monitoring occurs at Months 1, 3, 6 and 12 following the transplant. Approximately 150 study subjects from 15-20 transplant centers in the United States will be enrolled.

COMPLETED
Combination Immunosuppressive Therapy to Prevent Kidney Transplant Rejection in Adults
Description

Transplant rejection occurs when a patient's body does not recognize the new organ and attacks it. Patients who have kidney transplants must take drugs to prevent transplant rejection. Alemtuzumab is a man-made antibody used to treat certain blood disorders. The purpose of this study is to test the safety and effectiveness of using alemtuzumab in combination with two other drugs, sirolimus and tacrolimus, to prevent organ rejection after kidney transplantation. This study will also test whether this combination of medications will allow patients to eventually stop taking antirejection medications entirely. Study hypothesis: A new strategy of immunosuppression using alemtuzumab, tacrolimus, and sirolimus for human renal transplantation will permit a step-wise withdrawal from immunosuppressive drugs.

COMPLETED
Sirolimus and Thymoglobulin to Prevent Kidney Transplant Rejection
Description

This study will test the safety and effectiveness of two drugs, Sirolimus and Thymoglobulin, for preventing rejection of transplanted kidneys. Standard anti-rejection therapy uses a combination of drugs, such as cyclosporine, tacrolimus, azathioprine, steroids, and others, that are taken daily for life. However, even with this daily therapy, more than half of kidney recipients slowly reject their transplant within 10 years. Both Thymoglobulin, an antibody, and Sirolimus, an anti-rejection drug, prevent rejection by lowering the response of the immune system to the transplanted organ. Thymoglobulin is given in the pre- and postoperative period, and Sirolimus is taken long term. Patients who receive a kidney transplant at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center are eligible for this study. Candidates will be screened with a medical history, physical examination, and blood and urine tests. Participants will undergo a kidney transplant. Before the surgery, a central line (intravenous catheter), through which blood and medicine can be given, is placed in the neck or chest. Patients may also undergo leukapheresis, a procedure for collecting white blood cells. The cells can be stored for transfusion later if white cell counts drop following Thymoglobulin treatment. For this procedure, blood is drawn from a needle placed in the arm and flows into a machine that separates the blood components by spinning. The white cells are collected in a bag and the red cells and plasma are returned through a second needle in the other arm. Thymoglobulin will be given intravenously the day before the transplant and days 1 through 9 after the operation. Sirolimus will be taken by mouth, mixed with water or orange juice. Sirolimus therapy starts the day of the transplant and continues for life. Follow-up study visits will be scheduled weekly for the first month after the transplant, then every 6 months for 1 year and then once a year for 4 years. Procedures during these visits may include blood and urine tests, physical examination, and check of vital signs (i.e., blood pressure, heart rate, breathing rate, temperature). Kidney biopsies (removal of a small piece of tissue for examination under the microscope) will be done at 2 weeks, 1 month and 6 months after surgery and then yearly for 4 years to check for any damage to the kidney. In addition, a local doctor will do routine laboratory tests 2 to 3 times a week for the first 2 to 3 months aft...

Conditions
COMPLETED
Prevention of Kidney Transplant Rejection
Description

The purpose of this study is to see how effective 2 drugs, irbesartan and pravastatin, are at slowing kidney transplant failure. Many kidney transplant patients have some type of chronic rejection. Chronic rejection is a disease that causes scarring and damage to the kidney. Over time, chronic rejection can lead to kidney failure, making it necessary for patients to start dialysis and possibly receive another kidney transplant. Doctors would like to see whether irbesartan and pravastatin can slow this damage and prevent kidney failure in patients with signs of chronic rejection.

NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Treatment of Antibody-Mediated Rejection (ABMR) With CarBel
Description

The purpose of this study is to see: 1. If using these two drugs (carfilzomib and belatacept) together is safe 2. If the use of these two study drugs in addition to the usual immunosuppression for kidney transplant patients can improve your transplanted kidney function by lowering the antibodies you have against your transplanted kidney 3. If the study drugs effect the immune cells that were responding to your donor kidney. And, whether blood or urine tests can measure signs of inflammation and kidney cell injury 4. If using new computer techniques can help describe important changes seen on biopsy in your donated kidneys The primary objective is to assess the efficacy of carfilzomib and belatacept therapy when added to current treatment with steroids and maintenance immunosuppression, compared to conventional treatment alone, to improve the clinical outcome of renal transplant patients with active and chronic - active ABMR occurring more than 6 months after renal transplantation or less than 6 months post-transplant with persistent refractory Antibody-Mediated Rejection (ABMR)

NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Deep Phenotyping of the Renal Allograft to Prognosticate Clinical Outcomes
Description

The goal of this observational study is to determine phenotypic, transcriptional, and epigenetic underpinnings of renal allograft rejection in renal transplant rejection. The main questions it aims to answer are: * To determine the phenotype, frequency, location, and the inter-cellular interactions between the cells that constitute intra-graft inflammatory infiltrate in acute ejection. * To determine the phenotype, frequency, location, and the inter-cellular interactions between the cells that constitute intra-graft inflammatory infiltrate in recurrent/recalcitrant rejection vs. rejection that resolves with therapy. * To generate a scRNA sequencing (scRNAseq) map of the intra-graft immune cells and the renal parenchymal cells and compare the transcriptional and epigenetic changes within these cells in recurrent/recalcitrant rejection vs. rejection that resolves with therapy. * To determine phenotypic changes associated with chronic rejection. Participants will be asked to provide the following research specimens: * Renal biopsy specimens at the following timepoints: day of transplantation (pre-implantation and post-perfusion); routine protocol biopsies at 3 months and 12 months; and clinically indicated for-cause biopsies at any timepoint from time-0 to 1-yr post-transplantation. The 1st research core will be used for routine histopathological examination and left over tissue from this core will be used for deep phenotyping using multiparameter immunophenotyping, and digital spatial profiling. The second research core will be used for extraction of cells and nuclei for scRNAseq and snATACseq. * Blood samples will be processed to obtain plasma (for cytokine, chemokine and DSA measurements) and PBMC (for deep phenotyping and molecular analyses). For each collection timepoint, up to 75 mL (about 5 tablespoons) will be collected. * Prospective clinical data and outcomes will be collected from participant medical records. * Follow-Up Period: For-cause biopsies from 1-yr to 5-yr post-transplantation (by the transplant nephrologist): no additional cores will be obtained for research from these biopsies. The left-over tissue from the clinically indicated biopsy cores will be analyzed by deep phenotyping and digital spatial profiling. Blood samples will be processed to obtain plasma (for cytokine, chemokine and DSA measurements) and PBMC (for deep phenotyping and molecular analyses).

ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
Long-Term Safety and Efficacy of Tegoprubart in Kidney Transplant Recipients
Description

This study will evaluate the long term safety and efficacy of AT-1501 (tegoprubart) compared with tacrolimus in patients undergoing kidney transplantation.

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Safety and Efficacy of Tegoprubart in Patients Undergoing Kidney Transplantation
Description

This study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of AT-1501 compared with tacrolimus in patients undergoing kidney transplantation.

NOT_YET_RECRUITING
AIIM Trial: Personalized Medicine Approach to Kidney Allograft Function
Description

The objective of the proposed study it to perform a pilot clinical trial both to establish feasibility of applying a computational, augmented intelligence based approach, Phenotypic Precision Medicine (PPM), to optimizing combination drug therapy and to gather preliminary data to support a larger fully powered multi-center clinical trial. The key rationale for this clinical selection is that we have the technical, biological, and medical expertise in this disease, a wealth of experience in the use of PPM in both in vitro and the clinical setting, and a robust and integrated transplant program with a well-functioning clinical trial infrastructure.

UNKNOWN
TruGraf and TRAC In Pediatrics Study
Description

This is a pilot 3 center prospective study of pediatric renal kidney recipients undergoing protocol biopsies examining the performance of the TruGraf gene expression test in children and adolescents.

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Microbiome and Immunosuppression: The Mission Study
Description

The purpose of this research is to study immunosuppression drugs, certain foods, and how they can change the microbiome (the natural microorganisms inside the body) of the individual taking the immunosuppressive medications. The study team wants to study how the microbiome affects how the body processes the transplant medication.

UNKNOWN
Belatacept With Early Steroid Withdrawal rATG and Everolimus in Renal Transplantation (BETTER Trial)
Description

This study is designed to determine the safety and efficacy of two calcineurin inhibitor free treatment groups 1) a belatacept, everolimus and early corticosteroid withdrawal (ECSWD) immunosuppressive regimen with rabbit antithymocyte globulin induction (rATG) and 2) a belatacept, mycophenolate, chronic steroid regimen with rATG and compare to historical controls of tacrolimus-based and belatacept-based regimens in combination with rATG induction, mycophenolate, and ESWD in renal transplant recipients. The purpose is to evaluate the effect of 2 regimens (rATG induction/belatacept/everolimus/ESWD and rATG induction/belatacept/mycophenolate/CS) on the composite of patient death, graft loss, or eGFR (MDRD) \< 45 mL/min/1.73m2 at Month 12 post-transplantation compared to historical controls of the BEST Trial (groups B and C).

WITHDRAWN
Spleen Transplant in Solid Organ Transplantation
Description

Although the notions that kidney transplantation is the treatment of choice for patients with end-stage renal disease and that simultaneous kidney and pancreas transplant is the only treatment able to restore euglycemia in patients with type 1 diabetes and selected patients with type 2 diabetes, are now consolidated, rates of transplantation remain low among potential candidates with high levels of preformed anti-HLA antibodies. Most of the data comes from the experience in kidney transplant but can be easily translated to pancreas transplant. Approximately 30% of patients on the transplant waiting list have evidence of sensitization in the form of alloantibodies, generated from exposure to previous transplants, blood transfusions, pregnancy, or other events. The presence of a panel-reactive antibody level of at least 80% (i.e. a high level of sensitization) creates difficulty in finding matched kidneys from compatible donors, leading to lower rates of transplantation in highly sensitized candidates compared to non-sensitized; the longer waiting times translates in an increased mortality rate. Despite the development of desensitization strategies and the advancement in immunosuppression protocols, it is apparent that transplanting these patients carries an increased risk of acute antibody mediated rejection; 25%-50% of transplants will have an early acute antibody mediated rejection . Most of these rejections can be successfully treated, but a high rate of transplant glomerulopathy and chronic antibody mediated rejection (AMR) leading to accelerated allograft failure is common.

UNKNOWN
Immunosuppression Management in Renal Transplant Recipients With Transplant Excellence Based on TruGraf Test
Description

This is an investigator-initiated, single-center, prospective, randomized, proof of concept study. In this study patients who are status post kidney transplantation and meet the inclusion and exclusion criteria will undergo immunosuppression reduction and will be followed closely to assess stability of graft function.

COMPLETED
Transition of Renal Patients Using AlloSure Into Community Kidney Care
Description

Patients undergoing kidney transplantation alone (either de-novo or re-transplant) at a participating hospital are routinely surveyed with interval blood tests as part of standard post-operative care through outpatient consultation. These tests include serum creatinine, blood sugar as well as DSA testing at various intervals. The ability to screen patients to better identify those who may be at risk of developing an adverse event using AlloSure cfDNA is likely to be advantageous, with the potential to improve graft survival and outcomes for transplant patients. The addition of AlloSure to the interventional group will be the focus of this study. Patients will have quarterly AlloSure cfDNA testing (every 3 months) and DSA as part of their post-transplant surveillance for a period of 5 years.Participants will attend outpatient visits/follow-up visits as part of their standard care, these will include appointments where they will have blood tests taken as part of post-transplant surveillance. For AlloSure cfDNA and DSA, blood will be taken quarterly.

UNKNOWN
Assessing AlloSure Dd-cfDNA Monitoring Insights of Renal Allografts With Longitudinal Surveillance
Description

Prospective Observational Multicenter Cohort. External validation of donor derived cell free DNA in Renal Transplantation. Assessing performance of dd-cfDNA as a surveillance tool and its association with clinical outcomes. Outcomes include formation of de-novo DSA, eGFR decline, performance of AlloSure dd-cfDNA in Allograft rejection.

UNKNOWN
TruGraf® Long-term Clinical Outcomes Study
Description

This is a prospective, multi-center, observational study. Subjects will have OmniGraf™ (TruGraf® and TRAC™) testing at study enrollment and thereafter every 3 months. In addition subjects will have OmniGraf™ (TruGraf® and TRAC™) testing at any time there is a clinical suspicion of acute rejection. Data collection for the primary objective extends over a 2-year period.

UNKNOWN
Molecular Biomarkers in Renal Transplantation Via TruGraf® Test
Description

The TruGraf® test is a non-invasive blood test that measures molecular gene expression profiles associated with clinical conditions previously only diagnosed by biopsy in kidney transplant recipients. The results of the TruGraf test provide additional information about the adequacy of immunosuppression and may be used to support decisions in patient management.

TERMINATED
Acceptability and Feasibility of TruGraf® Testing as Part of the Standard of Care
Description

This is an observational study in renal transplant recipients to evaluate the acceptability, feasibility, and clinical utility of TruGraf® testing in conjunction with standard clinical assessment. TruGraf is the first and only non-invasive test approved by Medicare to rule out silent rejection in stable kidney transplant recipients.

TERMINATED
TruGraf® Testing in High-Risk Kidney Transplant Recipients
Description

This is an observational study to evaluate TruGraf® testing in high immune risk kidney transplant recipients. TruGraf is the first and only non-invasive test approved by Medicare to rule out silent rejection in stable kidney transplant recipients.

RECRUITING
Trifecta-Kidney cfDNA-MMDx Study
Description

Demonstrate the relationship between DD-cfDNA levels and HLA antibodies in blood, and the Molecular Microscope® (MMDx) Diagnostic System results in indication biopsies.

COMPLETED
Comparison of Tacrolimus Extended-Release (Envarsus XR) to Tacrolimus Immediate-Release in Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) Sensitized Kidney Transplant Recipients
Description

This is a randomized, open-label, controlled clinical trial designed to compare clinical outcomes after kidney transplantation using extended-release tacrolimus (Envarsus XR) versus immediate tacrolimus among highly-sensitized kidney transplant recipients. Outcomes to be assessed include the incidence of biopsy-proven acute rejection at 12 months, the presence of de novo and pre-existing donor-specific HLA antibodies, estimated glomerular filtration rate, and the level of donor-derived cell-free DNA.

COMPLETED
Immune Monitoring to Facilitate Belatacept Monotherapy
Description

* To determine the utility of novel blood-based immune monitoring tools (Allosure and Trugraf) to facilitate belatacept monotherapy. * To determine the percent of belatacept-treated renal transplant patients that can be safely converted to belatacept monotherapy.