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The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the National Institutes of Health (NIH), published Final Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Organ Policy Equity (HOPE) Act Safeguards and Research Criteria for Transplantation of Organs Infected With HIV. All such transplants must occur under an institutional review board (IRB) approved research protocol that is compliant with federal regulations governing human subjects research. This is an investigator-initiated, observational prospective study of solid organ transplantation utilizing HIV-positive donors in HIV positive recipients. Stable HIV-infected adults in need of a solid organ transplant (kidney) who meet standard and study specified HIV criteria for organ transplantation will be offered enrollment in the study. Deceased donors (kidney) and living donors (kidney) will be utilized in this protocol.
The goal of this research is to increase knowledge about the safety, efficacy, and effectiveness of solid organ transplantation (SOT) utilizing HIV-positive donors in HIV-positive recipients.
Full description
This is an observational prospective study of solid organ transplantation utilizing HIV-positive donors in HIV-positive recipients. Stable HIV-infected adults in need of a solid organ transplant (kidney) who meet standard and study specified HIV criteria for organ transplantation will be offered enrollment in the study. Deceased donors (kidney) and living donors (kidney) will be utilized in this protocol. 25 stable HIV-infected adults in need of a solid organ transplant (kidney) who meet standard and study specified HIV criteria for organ transplantation and 5 living donors (kidney) will be offered enrollment in the study. Living donors will be followed under a separate addendum protocol.
Each HIV-positive recipient and prospective HIV-positive recipient will be provided an independent advocate who is responsible for protecting and promoting the rights and interests of the HIV-positive recipient (or prospective recipient). The purpose of the independent advocate for the HIV-positive recipient is to:
All potential participants who provide informed consent will be enrolled into the pre-transplant phase of the study. In the pre-transplant phase of the study, standard and HIV-specific eligibility will be confirmed. Enrolled participants will consent to the collection of retrospective medical record data including but not limited to clinic notes, laboratory data, diagnostic procedures and reports for all prior HIV therapies.
As per Health Resource Services Administration (HRSA) and Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN)/Policy 15.6, at the time of transplant listing "willing to accept an HIV-positive organ" status will be indicated in the secure database used by both transplant hospitals and organ procurement organizations to coordinate organ recovery and waitlist candidate matching. HIV-positive matches will be run for study participants who have indicated an interest in HIV+ organs. If an HIV+ organ becomes available for a participant, the participant will have an opportunity to accept or defer the organ offer. Participants who accept an HIV+ or HIV suspected false positive organ offer will enter the Post-Transplant Follow-up Phase for HIV D+/R+ participants and participants who accept an HIV- (D) organ offer will enter the Post -Transplant Follow-up Phase for HIV D-/R+ participants.
Participants will then be followed prospectively for up to 5 years. Demographic and clinical data on the donors and recipients (and outcomes) will be extracted from the United Network for organ Sharing (UNOS) and Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipient (SRTR) databases. During this prospective follow-up, all medical record data includes but is not limited to records of hospitalization, laboratory reports, clinic notes, medication lists, biopsy results, and documentations of current therapies.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Recipient Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
Donor Criteria Deceased Donor Criteria
Living Donor Criteria
Greater than or equal to 18 years of age
Donor meets all clinical criteria to be a living donor other than being HIV positive.
Donor has consented to participate as a HIV-Positive Donor under the separate Addendum protocol.
Documented HIV infection using an FDA-licensed, approved, or cleared test device.
Well-controlled HIV infection, as evidenced by:
No evidence of invasive opportunistic complications of HIV infection
A kidney biopsy showing no evidence of a disease process that would put the donor at increased risk of progressing to end-stage organ failure after donation, or that would present a risk of poor graft function to the recipient.
A complete history of ART regimens and ART resistance.
The study team must be able to predict a safe, tolerable, and effective regimen to be prescribed for the recipient based on the donor's current ART regimen as well as the donor's history of ART resistance.
30 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Alfred Luk, MD,; Delainna Bartholomew, BS
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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