View clinical trials related to Antibody-mediated Rejection.
Filter by:Cross-sectional evaluation of antibody mediated injury in heart transplantation patients through a multimodal approach: electron microscopy, optic microscopy, immunohistochemistry techniques, transthoracic echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance, pressure guide wire, intravascular ultrasound
Patients after kidney transplantation who develop donor-specific antibodies (DSA) are at high risk for antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR). Donor-derived cell-free DNA (dd-cfDNA) levels have been shown to be increased in patients with active or chronic active ABMR. This study aims to evaluate if repeated analysis of dd-cfDNA in patients with DSA and kidney allograft biopsy which is triggered by increased levels of dd-cfDNA can lead to early diagnosis of active or chronic active ABMR among these patients.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether the peripheral blood marker-based molecular diagnostic method developed in the previous study can differentiate and predict accommodation and antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) in ABO blood type incompatible kidney transplant (ABOiKT) patients who are prospectively recruited.
This trial evaluates the addition of rituximab to standard of care in the treatment of antibody-mediated rejection in kidney transplant patients. The trial will involve adults and children. Half of participants will receive standard of care (methylprednisolone, intravenous immunoglobulin and plasma exchange), while the other half will receive standard of care and rituximab.
Despite reports that associate donor specific antibody (DSA) with rejection after liver transplantation, grafts are still allocated according to blood group (ABO) but not human leukocyte antigen (HLA) compatibility, possibly due to the absence of an easily discernible clinical association between adverse recipient outcome and DSA. Re-transplantation provides a test environment where the presence of preformed DSA or other antibodies is prevalent and events (graft loss) more common so that the effect of these antibodies on outcome should be apparent. This is an observational study of routine clinical care to determine these effects on our own patients. The goal is to perfect donor-recipient matching to attain the best outcome. In addition, we may develop hypotheses and potential treatments that would be tested in further clinical trials
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.
Patients who have had a previous allograft failure represent a major problem for transplant centers as they are highly-human leukocyte antigen (HLA) sensitized and unlikely to receive another transplant without significant desensitization. This single center, phase I/II, open label single-arm exploratory study focuses on enrolling twenty patients (ages 15-75) who will begin desensitization therapy to achieve HLA incompatible (HLAi) renal transplantation. Patients who qualify will receive up to 6 doses of clazakizumab 25 mg monthly pre-transplantation. If patients receive an HLAi transplant during the study, the participants will continue to receive another 6 monthly doses of clazakizumab 25 mg, followed by a 6 month protocol biopsy. Patients will continue another 6 doses over 6 months if improvements are seen after the 6th dose of clazakizumab. Patients who develop evidence of persistent allograft dysfunction may have non-protocol biopsies for cause. Patients who receive 12 doses of clazakizumab post-transplant will receive a 12M protocol biopsy.