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Fibrosis in Renal Allografts

A

Antwerp University Hospital (UZA)

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 4

Conditions

Interstitial Fibrosis
Immunosuppression
Transplantation
Kidney Failure, Chronic

Treatments

Drug: daclizumab
Drug: sirolimus
Drug: cyclosporine

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT00493194
2004-004115-38

Details and patient eligibility

About

This prospective, randomized study, comparing sirolimus to cyclosporine in renal transplant recipients, has two major objectives:

  1. -To determine the incidence and the degree of interstitialfibrosis and arteriosclerosis, as wel as the glomerular volume in protocol biopsies at 6 months in sirolimus-and in cyclosporine-treated renal allograft recipients, by means of quantitative computerized image analysis.

    • To determine the prognostic implication of these morphologic changes.
  2. To study the expression of genes, involved in inflammation and fibrosis, in protocol biopsies at 6 months in sirolimus-and cyclosporine-treated renal allograft recipients.

Full description

Calcineurin inhibitors have significantly improved the one-year graft survival of renal allografts. However, chronic nephrotoxicity caused by calcineurin inhibitors contributes to the long-term decline in renal function in kidney transplant recipients. Approximately ninety percent of the protocol biopsies of renal allografts, performed at 18 months post transplantation, show histological lesions of chronic calcineurin nephrotoxicity . In recent years, two new non-nephrotoxic immunosuppressive drugs, i.e. mycophenolate mofetil and sirolimus, have become available for the prophylaxis of graft rejection in renal transplantation.

Three randomized clinical trials, comparing cyclosporine with sirolimus in combination with mycophenolate mofetil, reported a superior graft function at one year in sirolimus treated renal allograft recipients. However, data on long-term graft survival and histological lesions of protocol biopsies in sirolimus-treated renal transplant recipients, are currently lacking.

In analogy with previous observations in native kidney disease, Grimm et al. recently reported that interstitial fibrosis in protocol biopsies of renal allografts, at 6 months post transplantation, significantly inversely correlates with the subsequent graft survival One hundred recipients of a first renal allograft will be randomized to an immunosuppressive protocol based on cyclosporine (50 patients) or sirolimus (50 patients). Concommittant immunosuppression will be similar in both groups, and consists of Daclizumab as induction treatment (five iv gifts every two weeks), and mycophenolate mophetil and steroids as maintenance immunosuppression.

Randomization will be performed by centre to avoid centre-related bias. All patients will complete a follow-up of 12 months. Two core biopsies of the graft will be obtained in each recipient, at implantation and at 6 months. Serum creatinine and the estimated creatinine clearance (by the Nankivell and the Jellife method) will be monthly recorded.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Recipients of a renal allograft, with a minimum age of 18 years.
  2. Male or female recipients. Women of child-bearing age must practice adequate contraception
  3. For renal allografts from living donors, at least one HLA-mismatch is required.
  4. Written informed consent, compliant with local regulations.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Recipients of a second or third renal allograft, with a past history of graft failure due to rejection.
  2. Recipients of a renal allograft from a haplotype-identical living donor or a non-heart beating donor.
  3. Cold ischemia time > 24 hours
  4. Recipients of a kidney from donors ≥ 65 years of age
  5. Recipients of multiple organs.
  6. Pregnant women.
  7. Immunological high-risk recipients, defined as current or historical PRA > 50 %
  8. Recipients with focal segmental sclerosis as primary renal disease.
  9. Recipients with leucopenia (WBC < 3000/mm³), thrombocytopenia (Thr < 100.000/mm³),or hyperlipidemia (Tot Chol > 300 mg/dl or Triglycerides > 300 mg/dl)
  10. Previous history of malignancy, except completely excised basocellular skin tumor
  11. Chronic active infection.
  12. Inadequate compliance to treatment.
  13. Use of specific drugs: Terfenadine, pimozide, astemizole, fluconazole, ketoconazole and cimetidine.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Central trial contact

Jean-Louis Bosmans, MD Ph.D; Angelika Jurgens, Coordinator

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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