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This research study is for liver transplant recipients and their respective living donors.
The purpose of this study is:
Full description
Doctors give drugs called immunosuppressants (IS) to people who receive a liver transplant. IS must be taken every day to prevent the body from injuring the transplanted liver by a process called rejection. Liver transplant recipients usually have to take these drugs for the rest of their lives. These drugs have harmful side effects. Researchers are looking for ways to keep a transplanted liver working normally with as little IS medications as possible. Finding a way to lower and then stop these medications will allow the liver recipient to avoid unwanted side effects.
Another area of research looks at how blood cells work to reject or accept an organ transplant. Studies show that some of the recipient's own cells, called T regulatory cells (Tregs), may play a part in accepting the transplanted liver and preventing rejection.
A recipient's Tregs can be grown in the laboratory to increase their number. Exposing the recipient's Tregs to the liver donor's cells will stimulate the Tregs that recognize the liver donor to grow vigorously. Giving these "donor reactive" Tregs back to the transplant recipient through a vein (intravenously) might allow a liver transplant recipient to take lower doses of IS, or perhaps to stop them altogether, without rejecting the liver.
The study team will collect information about the Treg infusion, liver tests and drug doses during IS withdrawal, and any problems that may arise in the study. Blood, liver tissue, and buccal (cheek) cells will be collected for research tests.
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Study Enrollment Inclusion Criteria:
Subjects who meet all of the following criteria are eligible for enrollment:
Able to understand and provide informed consent
Have received a primary, solitary, living donor liver transplant more 24 months and less than 84 months ago
Have a living donor who is willing to consent to a one time blood draw of 100 mLs to enable the manufacture of Donor Alloantigen Reactive Regulatory T cells (darTregs)
Eighteen to 70 years of age at the time of study entry/consent
Liver function test (LFT) results: have Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT)consistently <60 U/L and either alkaline phosphatase consistently <150 U/L or Gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) consistently <60 U/L
Currently receiving a Calcineurin Inhibitor (CNI) with 12 hour trough levels consistently <6.0 ng/mL for tacrolimus; <150 ng/mL for cyclosporine
Currently receiving CNI monotherapy or CNI and one of the following:
Female and male participants with reproductive potential must agree to use effective methods of birth control for the duration of the study.
If history of Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), liver transplantation (LT) recipients who have:
α-fetoprotein (AFP) less than 100 μg/L at the time of transplant AND
Explanted liver:
Risk Estimation of Tumor Recurrence After Transplant (RETREAT) Score less than or equal to 3
If history of HCC, at the time of enrollment, subjects must also:
Be 36 months or more post-transplant AND
Without evidence of recurrent HCC defined as:
If history of hepatitis C virus (HCV) , recipients must be:
Study Enrollment Exclusion Criteria:
Participants who meet any of these criteria are not eligible for study enrollment:
darTregs Infusion Inclusion Criteria:
Subjects must meet all criteria below to receive darTregs infusion:
darTregs Infusion Exclusion Criteria:
Subjects who meet any of these criteria are not eligible for darTregs infusion:
Inclusion Criteria for Resuming IS Withdrawal after darTregs Infusion:
Subjects are eligible to resume IS withdrawal after darTregs infusion if all criteria below are met:
Primary purpose
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15 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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