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Organ Donor clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03098706 Completed - Critical Illness Clinical Trials

Therapeutic Hypothermia in "Expanded Criteria" Brain-dead Donors and Kidney-graft Function

HYPOREME
Start date: November 8, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Each year, only one third of patients registered on the waiting list receive a kidney transplant. Numerous paths are being explored with the aim of reversing this shortage. The first is to increase the number of organs by developing harvesting from donors in a state of brain-death (BD) termed "expanded criteria donors" or from patients deceased from circulatory arrest. Another fundamental factor is to insure the success of the transplant by limiting the dysfunction of donor kidneys, marked by a delayed graft function (DFG). The development of techniques to insure correct perfusion of harvested organs, and the optimization of reanimation and intensive care of brain-dead donors constitute important factors in DGF reduction. Therapeutic Hypothermia could to be an attractive care strategy for BD patients.

NCT ID: NCT01009125 Completed - Organ Donor Clinical Trials

Healthcare Access and Utilization Among Living Kidney Donors

Start date: January 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a mailed survey to persons who served as living kidney donors at Saint Barnabas Medical Center. The experimental component of this study (the clinical trial) is a randomized trial of two monetary incentives for the living kidney donors invited to participate in the study. Kidney donors will be randomized to receive one of two incentives in the mailed survey packet: $2 cash vs. $5 cash. The main outcome measure is the response rate to the survey.

NCT ID: NCT00310401 Completed - Pulmonary Edema Clinical Trials

The Effect of Nebulized Albuterol on Donor Oxygenation

Start date: April 2007
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to test the effectiveness of albuterol versus placebo with the following specific aims: a) Treatment of brain dead organ donors with albuterol will reduce pulmonary edema, improve donor oxygenation, and increase the number of lungs available for transplantation, b) Developing a blood test to predict the development of primary graft dysfunction in lung transplant recipients, and c) treating brain dead organ donors with albuterol will decrease markers of primary graft dysfunction and lead to improved lung transplant recipient outcomes and to higher rates of lungs suitable for transplantation.