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BK Viremia clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05325008 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Kidney Transplant Infection

A Trial to Treat Polyomavirus Infections (BKPyV) in Kidney and Simultaneous Kidney Pancreas Transplant Recipients

BEAT-BK
Start date: August 18, 2023
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

BEAT-BK will see the effect of immunosuppression reduction/modification with and without IVIG on BKPyV infection, allograft function, allograft loss, acute transplant rejection, immunosuppression load and death in kidney and simultaneous kidney pancreas transplant recipients with polyomavirus infections (BKPyV).

NCT ID: NCT05224583 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Kidney Transplant Infection

Prevalence of BK Viremia in Simultaneous Liver-Kidney Transplant

Start date: November 17, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The human BK polyomavirus is a significant risk factor for renal transplant dysfunction and allograft loss. The prevalence of BK viremia (BKV) following kidney transplantation is estimated to be 10-20%.

NCT ID: NCT01649609 Completed - BK Viremia Clinical Trials

Using mTOR Inhibitors in the Prevention of BK Nephropathy

Start date: March 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

BK virus infections after kidney transplant are increasing and can result in damage to the transplanted kidney. Currently, the universally accepted treatment is to decrease the strength of the antirejection medications but it is unclear what medications should be lowered and to what extent. The investigators propose to perform a study with patients who have BK virus detected in their blood during routine screening that appears to be increasing. The investigators will use two different strategies that involve different combinations of standard anti-rejection medications at lower dosages. Patients will be assigned to one of the two groups in a random manner across the two hospitals participating in the study. Patients will be followed for at least a year to determine if one strategy was more effective than the other in preventing an increase in the number of viruses in the blood stream and whether either one was more effective in reducing the negative impact of the infection on the functioning of the transplanted kidney.

NCT ID: NCT01034176 Completed - BK Viremia Clinical Trials

BK Treatment Study

Start date: February 2009
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Our hypothesis is that 30 days of oral levofloxacin (FDA approved antibiotic) in patients with persistent viremia (BK virus found in blood) will impair progress to BK virus induced kidney damage by significantly decreasing or eliminating BK virus in the blood.