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Immune Tolerance clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Immune Tolerance.

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NCT ID: NCT05745792 Active, not recruiting - Immune Tolerance Clinical Trials

Clinico-immunological Characterization and Immune Tolerance Breakdown in HU-autoimmunity

CarTo-Hu
Start date: February 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Phenotypic characterization of patients with Hu-Abs, including the different neurological presentation and the presence or not of an underlying cancer. Analysis and clinical correlation of the diagnostic techniques for Hu-Abs detection (immunofluorescence, immunodot/Western blot, and CBA) in serum and/or CSF. Genomic and transcriptomic features of tumors (histological and immune infiltrate characteristics, transcriptomic profile, mutational status).

NCT ID: NCT04621916 Active, not recruiting - Hemophilia A Clinical Trials

Preventing Inhibitor Recurrence Indefinitely

PRIORITY
Start date: September 21, 2020
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This study will enroll children who have hemophilia A with inhibitors who successfully completed immune tolerance induction per the ISTH criteria (negative inhibitor titer, recovery >66% of expected, and half-life of >6 hours with their current FVIII concentrate). Previous to emicizumab, there was only one option for these patients which was to continue FVIII therapy in a prophylaxis mode to prevent bleeding. There was a sense that the ongoing FVIII served to maintain tolerance however no evidence for this notion exists and in fact what limited data is available suggests that continuing FVIII may not be necessary simply to maintain tolerance. To figure out this question, this will be a randomized, controlled 2 arm study which will randomize patients post-successful ITI to emicizumab plus weekly FVIII (for maintenance of tolerance) versus emicizumab alone. Patients will be followed for up to 2 years. We aim to enroll 52 subjects. The FVIII weekly arm can use any factor VIII concentrate and emicizumab is standard of care for inhibitor and non-inhibitor patients.

NCT ID: NCT03744325 Active, not recruiting - Food Allergy Clinical Trials

Immune Responses in Hen's Egg Oral Immunotherapy

Start date: March 18, 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study determines how a 6 months oral immunotherapy (OIT) program with hen's egg (HE) effects cellular and humoral immune responses in 50 children with HE allergy. Clinical data, transcriptomics and epigenetics are combined and analyzed by advanced system biology methods. This study will provide better understanding of the effects and mechanisms of OIT.

NCT ID: NCT00319657 Active, not recruiting - Immune Tolerance Clinical Trials

Kidney and Blood Stem Cell Transplantation That Eliminates Requirement for Immunosuppressive Drugs

Start date: July 2004
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The Stanford Medical Center Program in Multi-Organ Transplantation and the Division of Bone Marrow Transplantation are enrolling patients into a research study to determine if blood stem cells injected after kidney transplantation, in combination with lymphoid irradiation ,will change the immune system such that immunosuppressive drugs can be completely withdrawn. Patients must have a healthy, completely human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-matched brother or sister as the organ and stem cell donor. One to two months before kidney transplant surgery, blood stem cells will be removed from the donor and the cells will be frozen. After transplant surgery, the recipient will receive radiation and anti-T cell antibody treatments for two weeks to prepare for injection of the stem cells. The stem cells will be injected at the end of the two-week treatment. If the stem cells persist in the recipient, immunosuppressive drugs will be gradually reduced until they are withdrawn completely at least six months after transplantation. Patients will be followed in the Stanford clinics for transplant patients. Patients who live outside of the San Francisco Bay Area must remain near Stanford for six weeks after transplant surgery.