Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
This is a randomized, controlled trial in liver transplantation in which conventional immunosuppressive treatment will be compared with a therapeutic strategy consisting in pre-transplant antibody-mediated T cell depletion followed by reduced calcineurin inhibitor usage. The working hypothesis is that antibody induction followed by calcineurin inhibitor minimization may promote development of tolerogenic mechanisms allowing the eventual withdrawal of all immunosuppressive therapy.
Full description
This is an open-label randomised controlled study in which patients will be randomised according to a 1:1 ratio to receive conventional immunosuppressive treatment or induction treatment plus reduced tacrolimus dosage. All transplanted patients enrolled in the study will be followed during 12 months and evaluated according to an intention-to-treat approach.
Specific Aim 1: To determine the proportion of liver recipients in whom tacrolimus usage can be significantly reduced 1 year after transplantation. Patients will be considered as successfully receiving a reduced tacrolimus regimen if this drug is given as a single dose every other day, or at the most administered as a single dose daily with trough levels < 5ng/mL.
Specific Aim 2: To determine the effect of induction treatment plus minimized immunosuppression on graft and patient survival.
Specific Aim 3: To determine the impact of induction treatment plus minimized immunosuppression on the development of: acute and chronic allograft rejection, hepatitis C virus graft recurrence, opportunistic infections, bone fractures, kidney failure, tacrolimus-related neurotoxicity, dyslipidemia and arterial hypertension.
Specific Aim 4: To establish whether the use of ATG induction followed by reduced doses of tacrolimus differentially affects anti-donor immune responses and/or promotes the development of T cell dependent immunoregulatory networks.
Conventional immunosuppressive protocol:
Induction protocol:
ATG-Fresenius 9mg/kg pre-transplantation, preceded by administration of 500 mg iv methylprednisolone. Infusion of ATG-F will be started whenever the surgeon confirms the suitability of the graft, and will take place during 6 hours.
Oral tacrolimus q12h, starting on postoperative day 1 at the required dosages in order to reach through drug levels between 5 and 12 ng/mL
Reduction of tacrolimus dosages starting 3 months after transplantation in stable patients with no evidences of graft rejection in the previous 60 days, and according to the following protocol:
Treatment of acute rejection episodes: mild to moderate acute rejection episodes: re-start 1-2 daily doses of tacrolimus. Severe acute rejection episodes or those mild to moderate episodes that do not improve after 10 days of treatment: 1-2 daily doses of tacrolimus plus methylprednisolone 0.5-1 g for 3 days. Resolution of the rejection episode will be followed by resumption of the above mentioned protocol. If a new rejection episode takes place, after treatment of the acute episode no further attempts to reduce tacrolimus dosages will be attempted. In all cases rejection will be confirmed by liver biopsy.
Patients suffering from hepatitis C virus infection will be treated as above, unless alpha-interferon treatment is considered. In this case, daily tacrolimus will be administered.
All patients will receive CMV prophylaxis with iv ganciclovir for 14 days and oral valganciclovir to complete 3 months after transplantation.
Sample collection during the study period
In addition to routine diagnostic tests, all enrolled patients will undergo the following procedures:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal