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The study seeks to determine if patients with a pre-existing, well-functioning kidney transplant from a HLA-identical living donor can be withdrawn from immunosuppressive medications without compromising allograft function through hematopoietic stem cell (HPSC) infusion from the same donor. HPSC infusion will be preceded by a conditioning regimen of total lymphoid irradiation (TLI) and rabbit anti-thymocyte globulin (rATG).
Full description
Immunological tolerance through combined kidney and HPSC transplant has been demonstrated at few centers of excellence within the United States. The ultimate aim of these protocols is to liberate patients from lifelong immunosuppression. Thus far, protocols have been limited to HLA-identical donor recipient pairs, undergoing simultaneous kidney transplant and HPSC infusion. In all protocols, the recipient undergoes a conditioning regimen to optimize engraftment. Our protocol employs a conditioning regimen of TLI and ATG.
There are many more patients with pre-existing well-functioning HLA-identical kidney transplants than those who present de novo for participation in tolerance trials. Despite this, post hoc tolerance induction through HPSC infusion in patients with a pre-existing kidney transplant has not yet been performed. Given the demonstrated success of tolerance protocols in simultaneous haploidentical kidney and HPSC transplant, the next logical step is to demonstrate that tolerance can be induced in the much greater subset of patients with pre-existing kidney transplants.
This study employs an established protocol for immunological tolerance induction in patients with a pre-existing, well- functioning kidney transplant from their haploidentical donor. These patients will undergo a conditioning with TLI and ATG, followed by infusion of HPSC from the same HLA-identical donor that provided the original kidney. The Investigators call this process "retroactive tolerance induction."
The investigators will evaluate whether recipients can be withdrawn from immunosuppressive drugs without compromising allograft function. At serial time points, (1) graft function will be monitored, and (2) chimerism will be measured in recipient whole blood and white blood cell subsets. Weaning of tacrolimus will begin at 6 months, with a goal of drug discontinuation within 12 months if the following conditions are met: (1) chimerism (defined as ≥1% donor type cells among the T cells, B cells, NK cells, and granulocytes) is detectable for at least 180 days after CD34+ and CD3+ cell infusion, (2) stable graft function (defined as eGFR >30 mL/min and no greater than sustained 30% change over 3 months from baseline) without clinical rejection episodes is maintained, and (3) there is no evidence of graft vs. host disease (GVHD).
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Recipient Inclusion Criteria:
Recipient Exclusion Criteria:
Donor is identical twin.
Major ABO incompatibility with donor
Positive HLA Donor-Specific Antibody (DSA)
History of multi-organ transplantation
History of rejection with current HLA-matched kidney transplant
Known allergy to rabbit proteins
History of post-transplant major complications, including de novo malignancy, active/chronic infection or rejection, with the exception of low risk, early-stage malignancy with
≥90% 5-year survival not receiving chemotherapy or immunotherapy and non-melanomatous skin cancer.
History of active malignancy within the past 5 years with the exception:
Worsening renal functioning over preceding 3-month interval determined per investigator discretion.
Pregnant (confirmed by urine or serum pregnancy test) or lactating.
Leukopenia (with a white blood cell count < 3,000/µL) or thrombocytopenia (with a platelet count < 70,000/µL).
EBV, CMV and BK PCR negative at time of HPSC infusion is preferred, but if they have had a history of + CMV/BK PCR, it should be resolved by 3 months.
Active bacterial, fungal, mycobacterial, or viral infection (including active hepatitis B and/or C).
Seropositivity for HIV 1 or 2 by 4th generation serum antibody/antigen testing, or HTLV I or II by serum antibody testing.
Renal disease with high risk of recurrence (i.e., focal segmental glomerulosclerosis).
Advanced hepatic fibrosis or cirrhosis secondary to hepatitis B and/or C diagnosis.
Uncontrolled intercurrent illness including, but not limited to, symptomatic congestive heart failure, unstable angina pectoris, or cardiac arrhythmia; active extra-renal autoimmune disease requiring immunosuppression.
Active extra-renal autoimmune disease requiring immunosuppression.
Neuropsychiatric illness that precludes the ability to give informed consent and/or places the participant as high risk for non-compliance with the safety monitoring requirements of the study.
May not have received other immunomodulatory agents, including but not limited to tumor necrosis factor inhibitors within six months of the study treatment. Use of corticosteroids prescribed for a time-limited indication (</= 4 weeks) and stopped at least 4 weeks before the kidney transplant is acceptable.
May not have received immunotherapy drugs such as immune checkpoint inhibitors (e.g. pembrolizumab, nivolumab, and ipilimumab), tumor necrosis factor inhibitors, rituximab, and interleukin-2 within six months of the study treatment.
Current or active abuse of alcohol and/or drugs within last 6 months.
Body Mass Index (BMI) ≥ 40.
Donor Inclusion Criteria:
HLA-matched sibling on high-resolution HLA typing who
a. is ≥18 years of age.
Must meet institutional criteria for HSPC transplant donation.
Medically fit to tolerate peripheral blood apheresis, including weighing ≥110 pounds, hemoglobin ≥11, white blood cell count ≥ 3,000/µL, and platelets ≥ 100,000/µL.
Serum creatinine as expected post-kidney donation and coagulation parameter studies; or, if abnormal, the changes are not considered clinically significant.
Donor exclusion criteria:
Recipient is identical twin.
Major ABO incompatibility with recipient.
Medically unfit to tolerate peripheral blood apheresis (e.g. small body size, poor vascular access, not a suitable candidate for placement of a central catheter).
Pregnant (confirmed by urine or serum pregnancy test) or lactating.
Seropositivity for HIV 1 or 2 by 4th generation serum antibody/antigen testing, HTLV I or II by serum antibody testing
Active West Nile Virus infection.
Active bacterial, fungal, mycobacterial or viral infection (including active hepatitis B and/or C).
Psychiatric, addictive, neurological, or other disorder that compromises ability to give true informed consent for participation in this study.
History of active malignancy within the past 5 years with the exception:
No use of oral anticoagulants 2 days prior to apheresis. Note: Use of aspirin and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, for pain and inflammation management purposes, are permitted to enroll in the study, but these drugs must be stopped 7 days prior to apheresis, however subjects who are taking aspirin for its anti- platelet/anti-thrombotic effect, are excluded.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
10 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Ruth Wynne Jones; Jenny Lester, MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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