Hepatitis C Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Prospective Cross-over Study Comparing the Effect of Sirolimus Versus Mycophenolate on Viral Load in Liver Transplant Recipients With Recurrent Chronic HCV Infection
Different immunosuppressive drugs used in transplantation may reduce the body's defences against infection differently. It is known that patients with Hepatitis C virus, known as HCV, who switched from azathioprine to mycophenolate mofetil experienced an increase in viral load. Despite this, mycophenolate mofetil is used because it prevents rejection more reliably than azathioprine. Sirolimus is an another immunosuppressive agent that reliably prevents rejection and may have antiviral activity. This study is designed to see if the viral load of HCV and other viruses is reduced by switching from mycophenolate to sirolimus.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) persistence after liver transplantation for HCV end-stage liver
disease is universal and in this clinical setting, HCV mediated liver injury has been
reported to follow a more progressive course compared to the non-immunosuppressed patient.
Additionally, patients with recurrent chronic hepatitis C develop higher viral load compared
to pre-transplant levels. Such persistently high viral burden post transplant may contribute
to allograft damage. The choice of calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) does not effect recurrence
rates of HCV hepatitis. HCV is also associated with renal dysfunction so that reduction in
exposure to calcineurin inhibitors (CNI) is desirable. Unfortunately steroids are associated
with a marked increase in HCV replication and cannot be used to reduce CNI doses.
Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) increases HCV viral load. A recent increase in the severity of
recurrent hepatitis in patients with HCV receiving liver transplants has been attributed to
MMF and interleukin-2 receptor blockers. Increased fibrosis of the liver occurs during
antiviral anti HCV treatment in patients taking mycophenolate but patients on azathioprine
develop cirrhosis faster, possibly because of rejection.
A large industry sponsored phase III clinical trial has been underway for several years
where patients have substituted sirolimus (SRL) for calcineurin inhibitors after liver
transplantation. The object of that study is to determine impact of conversion on renal
function. No detrimental effect (thrombosis, rejection or recurrent viral infection) was
apparent to the safety board after two reviews. No study has compared SRL to MMF after liver
transplantation.
SRL, an immunosuppressive drug that inhibits the activation and proliferation of
T-lymphocytes, is associated with reduction of Epstein Barr Virus (EBV) post-transplantation
viral load in children. Experimentally it inhibits the growth of EBV B-cell lymphoma. A
pilot study of tacrolimus with SRL showed a powerful anti-rejection effect but a subsequent
trial was halted early because of an increase in hepatic artery thrombosis even though the
rates of thrombosis in either arm of the study was below that expected. A recent large
series in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (most of whom had HCV) who received large
doses of SRL showed a beneficial anti-cancer effect without thrombosis. The randomised
trials and the reported series all had large numbers of patients with HCV. The absence of
obvious recurrent HCV hepatitis and the low rates of cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease coupled
with the known inhibition of EBV replication gives hope that SRL has anti-viral properties
at immunosuppressive doses. Early reports confirm that hope: 1) successful liver
transplantation in patients with HIV and HCV. "Significantly better control of HIV and HCV
replication was found among patients taking RAPA monotherapy (P=0.0001 and 0.03,
respectively)"; 2) switching to sirolimus in renal transplant recipients with hepatitis C
virus: HCV replication reduced by switch to sirolimus; 3) sustained, spontaneous
disappearance of serum HCV-RNA under immunosuppression after liver transplantation for HCV
cirrhosis: two liver recipients who spontaneously cleared HCV after switch to sirolimus.
SRL (2 mg/day) and MMF (2g/day) are licensed as adjuvant immunosuppressive agents to be used
in kidney transplantation with cyclosporine so that immunosuppressive equivalent doses are
1mg SRL = 1g MMF.
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Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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