Pediatric Kidney Transplant Recipients Clinical Trial
Official title:
Dose-adjustment of Enoxaparin by a Bayesian Pharmacological Approach in Pediatric Kidney Transplant Recipients
Allograft vascular thrombosis is a devastating complication in kidney transplantation in adults and older children. Though uncommon, it is often irreversible and represents the main cause of graft loss within after kidney transplantation in adults and in the first post-operative year in children. Since allograft thrombosis is usually observed in the first 48h post-operatively, the need to promptly achieve appropriate anticoagulation in at-risk patients is of utmost importance. However, no consensus exists regarding the optimal prophylaxis in the peri-transplant period and the following dose-adjustment, and practices are highly heterogeneous among centers. Moreover, the therapeutic target is very narrow and antithrombotic agents may conversely increase the risk of allograft hematoma. Enoxaparin is a low molecular weight heparin commonly used in this context, but off-label in children. Therapeutic ranges are based on anti-Xa levels 4 to 6 hours following injection and extrapolated from adults although evidences suggest that such extrapolation may be inappropriate in many circumstances. The current pediatric practice of dose adjustment to achieve and maintain a target anti-Xa range is empirical and dependent on the physician. The aim of the proposed clinical trial is to assess the efficacy/safety profile of this bayesian-based dose optimization in the clinical setting, as compared to the current practices of empirical adjustment. This should greatly improve the personalized management of renal transplanted children, a subset of patients with singular renal function and little-investigated pharmacokinetics and help standardizing and rationalizing practices.
The investigators will compare the efficacy of the Bayesian based dose versus the dose determined in a usual empirical way based on each physician's experience. The primary endpoint is the Anti-Xa activity within the target range 28 to 30 hours after initiation of the treatment. This is an open labelled randomized clinical trial. The randomization will proceed during the inclusion visit by the local pediatric nephrologist or intensivist just before the first enoxaparin injection, administered within 24 hours post-transplantation. The investigators will conduct a national multicentric study with 9 inclusion centers which are all nephrology units specialized in renal transplantation. ;