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Renal transplantation is the best choice for the treatment of end-stage renal disease, but the long-term survival of the graft is still remains a challenge. Chronic antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) is the main factor affecting the long-term survival of the graft. There is still no effective treatment for chronic antibody-mediated rejection, even in the active phase (CaAMR). In recent years, new therapeutic drugs based on the generation of DSA and the mechanism of AMR, including protease inhibitor bortezomi, CD20 monoclonal antibody, C5 monoclonal antibody and IL-6 antibody, have not been able to effectively eliminate and inhibit the generation of DSA, nor have they been proved to have a definite effect on AMR.
CD38 is a type II transmembrane protein that is highly expressed on plasma cells and NK cells, which are considered to play a key role in the occurrence and development of AMR. Recently, a few cases have reported that CD38 monoclonal antibody combined plasma exchange and/or IVIG may be an effective strategy for the prevention and treatment of AMR, but the effectiveness and safety of daratumumab monotherapy on CaAMR were unknown. This is a multicenter, prospective, single arm clinical study. The study will enroll 15 renal transplant recipients with positive DSA and CaAMR confirmed by biopsy after renal transplantation. According to inclusion and exclusion criteria patients will be screened to participate in the trial.
Full description
After successful enrollment, the patient will receive daratumumab of 16mg/kg once every two weeks (0-22 weeks) for a total of 12 times, and continue to receive triple immunosuppressive therapy with prednisone, mycophenolic acid, tacrolimus (target valley concentration of 5-7ng/ml) or cyclosporine (target valley concentration of 100-200ng/ml). Peripheral blood samples were collected from 0 to 24 weeks (weeks 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, and 24) for routine blood tests, liver and kidney function electrolytes, tacrolimus or cyclosporine trough concentrations, HLA antibody quantification (weeks 0, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, and 24), infection indicators (weeks 0, 8, and 24), immune status assessments (weeks 0, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, and 24), and biopsy of transplanted kidneys was performed at 24 weeks to assess pathological changes.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Patients participating in another clinical trial
Age less than 18 years old
Female subjects are pregnant or breastfeeding, or do not receive appropriate contraceptive measures
ABO incompatibility transplantation
Kidney transplantation biopsy combined with one of the following results:
A. T-cell mediated rejection B. New or recurrent severe thrombotic microangiopathy C. Polyomavirus nephropathy
Receive anti acute rejection treatment within 3 months before screening
Have been treated with other immunomodulatory monoclonal/polyclonal antibodies (such as CD20 antibody, bortezomib, C5 monoclonal antibody, IL-6/IL-6R antibody) within 3 months
Total bilirubin>2 times the upper normal limit, alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase>2.5 times the upper normal limit
Hemoglobin<8 g/dL
Thrombocytopenia: Platelets<100 × 109/L
Leukopenia: White blood cells<3 × 109/L, neutropenia: neutrophils<1.5 × 109/L
Hypogammaglobulinemia: Serum IgG<400 mg/dL
Eliminate active viral, bacterial, or fungal infections
Excluding Active Malignant Diseases with Intensive Immunosuppressive Therapy
Latent or active tuberculosis
Inoculate live vaccine within 6 weeks after screening
History of alcohol or illicit drug abuse
Serious medical or mental illness that may affect participation in the study
Active hepatitis B virus infection
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
15 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Yu Cui, MD; Jianyong Wu, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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