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Primary Objectives:
Secondary Objectives:
-Decrease in incidence of humoral rejection to less than 50 % at 1 year.
Full description
For patients with a donor specific antibody, a protocol of plasmapheresis and intravenous immunoglobulin has been used to remove circulating antibodies and suppress antibody production. While this therapy is effective at enabling transplantation, it has a reported failure rate of 50% (Personal communication, Johns Hopkins' group); it is expensive (average cost of protocol $55,000.00 does not include transplant surgery costs; personal communication: Johns Hopkins' group) and may be fraught with infectious complications particularly when combined with current immunosuppression protocols.
To date, there is no effective treatment protocol designed to desensitize end stage renal disease patients with a high Panel of Reactive Antibodies (PRA) (i.e., >70%). Patients with elevated PRA levels have a longer median organ waiting time when compared to those with lower PRA. Patients with elevated PRA have decreased allograft survival when compared to controls. It has been reported that 50% of cadaveric kidneys transplanted into high PRA recipients (>20%) suffered of rejection within 6 months of transplantation.
Pathophysiologically, an elevated PRA or a donor specific antibody is acquired through the sensitization of the host against major histocompatibility antigens (HLA) following multiple blood transfusions, prior pregnancy or organ transplantation. The constant levels of anti-HLA antibodies are maintained through the persistent stimulation of naïve and memory B-cells by these antigens. The number of patients with a high PRA and/or donor specific antibodies is expected to increase as more patients with failed kidney transplants are entering the waiting list.
Although initially introduced for the treatment of neoplasms, the humoral immunosuppressant effects of Rituximab have been shown to have clinical significance. In an attempt to understand the humoral immunosuppressant effects of Rituximab Gonzalez-Stawinski et al., reported the effects of the monoclonal on a de-novo and memory humoral immune response. Their work showed that Rituximab interferes with both primary and secondary humoral responses by eliminating B-cells prior to antigen exposure thus interfering with differentiation into antibody secreting cells and specific antibody production (Gonzalez-Stawinski)
Enthusiasm for these data resulted in small, single center experiences using Rituximab in the post-transplant and pre-transplant settings. Post-transplantation, Becker et al. utilized Rituximab as rescue therapy in 4 kidney transplant patients who developed acute humoral rejection. These patients had failed conventional rescue therapy (high dose intravenous steroids, and plasmapheresis with IVIg), but transplants were salvaged by a single dose of Rituximab (375mg/M2) as demonstrated by improvements in creatinine clearances. Also in a post-transplant setting, Samaniego et al. successfully utilized Rituximab in a small population of highly sensitized renal transplant patients with positive donor specific crossmatch who failed the standard plasmapheresis and IVIg protocol. Pre-transplantation, Vieira et al were able to reduce the concentrations of anti-HLA antibodies after the administration of a single dose of Rituximab. Fifty percent of these patients had their PRA's decrease by nearly 40% of baseline.
In these small clinical reports, Rituximab has been an effective humoral immunosuppressant that eliminates the cell population responsible for anti-HLA antibody production by virtue of the modulation of naïve or memory B-cells prior to/or during HLA stimulation. However, the effect of a schema of multiple doses of Rituximab on donor specific crossmatch is yet to be determined.
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Immunization with a live vaccine is specifically excluded during the study.
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