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This is a Phase I/II double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study assessing safety and limited efficacy of intraoperative C1INH (500U/kidney) vs. Placebo administered into the graft renal artery 1-2 hours prior to implantation in adult subjects receiving a deceased donor kidney allograft considered high-risk for development of DGF (KDPI>80). Once eligible patients are identified, consented, and have an acceptable kidney transplant offer, they will be randomized by the Cedars-Sinai Research Pharmacy to receive study drug vs. placebo. Drug and placebo will be prepared by the Cedars-Sinai Research Pharmacy and conveyed to the operating room in a blinded manner. The drug will be administered by the transplant surgeon in the OR in a blinded manner.
Full description
Pre-operative, infusion of C1INH into the renal allograft artery 1-2 hours prior to implantation will improve early graft function and reduce the rate of DGF, requirements for dialysis, graft survival and eGFR in patients receiving kidney allografts from high risk deceased donor compared to placebo.
Early graft function has a long-term effect on graft survival. Poor early graft function and DGF contributes to decreased short- and long-term patient and graft survival, increased incidence of acute rejection, prolonged hospitalization, and higher costs of transplantation. Although multiple factors contribute to the impaired graft function, ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) is the underlying pathophysiology leading to poor early graft function and DGF. A >35% incidence of DGF has remained constant over time despite significant improvements in immunosuppressive strategies and patient management. This may be due to increased use of kidneys from "extended-criteria" and/or non-heart-beating donors, where even greater rates (>60%) of DGF have been reported.
More than 94,653 people are currently waiting for a kidney transplant in the United States (UNOS.org 9/30/2019). Of the 19,360 kidney transplants performed in the US in 2018, 20% were from DCD donors and 9% from donors of KDPI>85. The USRDS reports that more than 50% of patients on the waiting list are willing to accept a kidney from an expanded-criteria donor (KDPI >85). This study will seek to expand the use of high KDPI kidneys and reduce wastage by showing improved function after C1INH treatment.
Patients who fulfill all I/E criteria will be eligible to be enrolled into Study
I Study Group (40 patients):
Treatment Arm I - KDPI >80 kidneys will be infused with one intrarenal dose of 500U of Berinert® in OR prior to implantation into the recipient.
Control Arm - KDPI >80 kidneys will be administered one intrarenal dose of normal saline (NS) in the OR in a volume identical to the volume of the dose of Berinert® before implantation of kidney into the patient.
Drug v. placebo administration will be randomized 1:1. Drug preparation and randomization will be carried out in a blinded fashion by research pharmacist.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Adult men or women (18-70 years of age) who are on chronic dialysis therapy and acceptable candidates for receipt of a kidney transplant.
Recipients who are ABO compatible with donor allograft
Understand and sign a written inform consent prior to any study specific procedure
Women of childbearing potential must have a negative pregnancy test prior to randomization, and must be on an acceptable form of birth control.
. AND one of the below criteria:
a)Recipients of kidney allograft from KDPI >80 donors b)Recipients of kidney allograft from DCD donors c)Recipients of kidney allograft with CIT > 24 hours d)Recipients of kidney allograft from donor on HD/CRRT prior to death/procurement e)Recipients of kidney allograft with donor terminal creatinine SCr ≥3.0 mg/dL f)Patient risk a total risk index score of >/=3
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45 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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