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The objective of the VIRTUUS Children's Study is to adapt identified and validated adult noninvasive diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers for the characterization of allograft status in pediatric recipients of kidney allografts.
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Advances in immunosuppressive regimens have significantly improved short-term allograft survival for kidney transplant recipients. Yet, long-term allograft survival remains static. For children with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), improvements in long-term outcomes are greatly needed. Children with ESRD require multiple transplants over a lifetime, incurring repeated surgical and immunological risks with each newly transplanted organ. Allograft injury occurs primarily due to acute cellular rejection (ACR) and/or antibody mediated rejection (AMR) and viral infections, such as BK virus associated nephropathy (BKVN). A major hindrance to promoting long-term allograft survival is the lack of non-invasive diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers to reliably detect early injury in the allograft before clinical manifestations arise.
The incidence of acute rejection (AR) in children in the first year post-transplant is 10-13%[1]. The current gold standard for diagnosing AR is core needle biopsy; however, biopsy is highly invasive, incurs risk of bleeding and graft loss, is subject to sampling error and lacks sensitivity and specificity for early injury. Since immune responses are dynamic over time, single biopsies do not adequately capture anti-allograft immunity, but repeat biopsies are impractical in children who often require sedation and hospitalization for biopsies. Other markers, such as serum creatinine, have low sensitivity and specificity for early kidney allograft damage.
The ability to identify sub-clinical kidney allograft injury using minimally invasive, robust, biomarkers with high sensitivity and specificity in pediatric recipients would represent a major advance in pediatric kidney transplant care. In the Clinical Trials in Organ Transplantation (CTOT)-04 study, a NIH-sponsored, multicenter, prospective study of adult kidney allograft recipients, members of the VIRTUUS team were able to diagnose and predict ACR using urinary cell mRNA and metabolite profiles with high sensitivity and specificity[2, 3]. In addition, the investigators validated a urinary cell mRNA signature that distinguishes acute rejection (AR) from acute tubular injury (ATI) and ACR from AMR as well as a urinary cell mRNA signature diagnostic and prognostic of BKVN[3-5]. The overarching objective of this VIRTUUS proposal is to adapt existing validated adult noninvasive diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers to characterize allograft status in pediatric recipients of kidney allografts. Specifically, the investigators will investigate 1) whether the adult urinary cell 3-gene signature is diagnostic and prognostic of ACR in pediatric recipients of kidney allografts, 2) whether the combined metabolite and the urinary cell 3-gene signature is diagnostic and prognostic of ACR in pediatric recipients of kidney allografts, 3) whether levels of BKV VP-1 mRNA in urinary cells are diagnostic of BKVN, and 4) whether urinary cell levels of plasminogen activator inhibitor -1 (PAI-1) mRNA and serum creatinine levels predict allograft failure.
Investigators propose to validate early immunologic markers that have shown to be prognostic and diagnostic in adult kidney transplant recipients in pediatric kidney transplant recipients. Investigator findings will significantly advance the field of pediatric transplantation by moving toward proactive, tailored immunosuppressive regimens that minimize morbidity and optimize long-term allograft survival.
The Investigator's primary objective is to hypothesize that: (i) the adult urinary cell 3-gene signature will be diagnostic and prognostic of ACR in longitudinally collected urine samples from children with kidney transplants; and (ii) combined metabolite and mRNA biomarkers have greater ability to diagnose ACR than the mRNA or metabolite signature alone and (iii) levels of BKV VP-1 mRNA are diagnostic of BK virus nephropathy (BKVN) and (iv) urinary cell levels of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) mRNA and serum creatinine levels predict allograft failure.
Investigators seek to:
Secondary objectives include the following:
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• Patient's primary medical team feels the subject's participation is not safe.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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