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Advances in renal transplantation have increased life-expectancy in patients with end-stage kidney disease. Conventional immunosuppressive drugs prevent efficiently early allograft losses due to T-cell mediated rejection. However, emerging data suggest that the majority of late kidney failures may be attributable to antibody-mediated rejection (AMR), which poorly responds to the currently available therapeutics. Complement-fixing donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies are associated with the worst outcome in keeping with the well-established role of the complement in AMR pathogenesis. Eculizumab, the first licenced complement blocker, has been found efficient in reducing the occurrence of AMR lesions in highly sensitized patients. A few reports also suggest that complement blockade may be of great value as salvage therapy for graft-threatening severe AMR. However, no information is available in the literature about the interest of complement blockade in curbing the progression of subclinical acute AMR to chronic AMR.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether complement blockade with eculizumab is effective and safe in the treatment of subclinical AMR in sensitized kidney transplant recipients.
Despite appropriate therapies, up to 75% of patients having received a renal transplant with preformed donor-specific antibody display subclinical AMR on their 3-month protocol biopsy. Subclinical AMR is defined by histological lesions of AMR concomitant with stable graft function. Moreover, the extent of these lesions at 3 month post-transplant correlates with the occurrence of irreversible scars and chonic antibody-mediated rejection on the 12-month biopsy.
This study aims to explore the efficacy and safety of eculizumab in patients exhibiting subclinical AMR on their 3 month-post-transplant biopsy, to reduce or even normalize microcirculation inflammation, and to prevent chronic rejection (transplant glomerulopathy) on the 12 month-screening biopsy. Eculizumab-treated patients will be compared with historical controls, matched for the lesions on the 3 month biopsy.
Full description
Advance in renal transplantation for the treatment of patients with end-stage kidney failure have led to significant improvements in patient survival. T-cell directed immunotherapeutic agents are capable of preventing early allograft loss and represent the cornerstone of current maintenance immunosuppressive regimens. However, recent studies have pointed out that the majority (63%) of late kidney failures could be attributable to antibody-mediated rejection. Microcirculation inflammation (poly and mononuclear cells within glomerular and peritubular capillaries) correlates best with alloantibody-induced endothelial damages and complement-fixing anti-HLA antibodies, predicts evolution toward chronic antibody mediated rejection (transplant glomerulopathy), and is associated with a poor outcome. Microcirculation inflammation, the hallmark lesions of AMR, are frequently observed (75%) on screening biopsies performed in sensitized patients having received a renal transplant across a positive crossmatch due to preformed DSA, despite intensive prophylactic therapy (including polyclonal immunoglobulin, plasma exchanges and rituximab).
Altogether these findings underscore the need for innovative treatment to better control the humoral arm of chronic rejection in patients with donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies. Short-term eculizumab treatment might be a promising avenue. Complement blockade with eculizumab has been found efficient in reducing the occurrence of AMR lesions in highly sensitized patients. A few reports also suggest that complement blockade may be of great value as salvage therapy for graft-threatening severe AMR. However, no information is available in the literature about the efficacy of complement blockade in curbing the progression of subclinical AMR to chronic AMR.
The primary objectives of this study are:
• To determine the effectiveness of eculizumab in reducing durably alloantibody-induced microcirculation inflammation and preventing chronic microcirculation damages on 12-month screening biopsies.
The secondary objectives of this study are:
This is an open-label exploratory study which evaluates eculizumab administration in sensitized patients with subclinical antibody-mediated rejection at 3 month-post-transplant. Ten patients fulfilling inclusion/exclusion criteria will be enrolled into the study and compared with 20 historical controls matched for the sensitization and histological lesions at 3 months. The patients enrolled in this study will be given eculizumab from 3 to 12 month post-transplant, according to the standard protocol in adults heavier than 40 kg (900 mg weekly for 4 weeks, 1200 mg for the fifth infusion and 1200 mg every other week thereafter).
Clinical and laboratory evaluations including vital signs and safety laboratory values will be monitored at predetermined time points.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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