View clinical trials related to Immunosuppression.
Filter by:The goal of this observational study is to better understand what happens to circulating blood after a patient experiences severe trauma injury. The main questions it aims to answer are: Is severe human trauma associated with specific patterns of development in the hematopoietic stem cells of these patients? and Does the initial severe trauma injury create immunosuppression and increase risk of in-hospital sepsis? Participants in study will give blood samples and a waste sample of bone marrow at time of operative repair of traumatic orthopedic injuries, supply medical information and participate in surveys and assessments during recovery from their injury(ies). Researchers will compare severe trauma injury patients to elective hip repair patients to see if immunosuppression and specific development patterns occur in the trauma patient versus the otherwise healthy hip surgery patient.
To study the efficacy and safety of pitavastatin and PCSK9 inhibitors in liver transplant patients on ongoing immunosuppressive therapy.
This phase 0 trial tests the feasibility, functionality, and sustainability of vascularized composite bladder allograft transplantation in treating patients with terminal bladder pathology. A vascularized bladder allograft transplantation may provide a more durable and better-tolerated alternative to standard urinary diversion, which employs bowel. A robotic surgical approach will be employed.
This is an unblinded, randomized, controlled, two-arm interventional research study enrolling patients who are undergoing heart transplantation. The aim of the study is to determine whether patients at low risk of rejection can safely reduce the doses of their post-transplant immunosuppression medications using a combination of tests that include donor-specific antibodies (DSA), histology (looking at tissue from the donor heart), donor-derived cell-free DNA (AlloSure), and gene expression profiling (AlloMap). Eligible participants will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio into the HeartCare immune-optimization (intervention) arm or the corresponding observational (control) arm. AlloSure and AlloMap are the components of the HeartCare panel developed by CareDx.
This is an unblinded, randomized, four-arm interventional research study enrolling patients who are undergoing kidney transplantation. The aim of the study is to determine whether patients at low risk of rejection can safely reduce the doses of their post-transplant immunosuppression medications using a combination of tests that include donor-specific antibodies (DSA), histology (looking at tissue from the donor graft), and donor-derived cell-free DNA (AlloSure). Eligible participants will be randomized in a 2:1 ratio into one of two immune-optimization (intervention) arms or the corresponding observational (control) arms. Two thirds of the participants in the study will have their decision to reduce immunosuppression made based on these test results and the other third will have the decision made based on standard of care clinical assessment and laboratory testing. The study will include two additional parameters under investigation - the AlloMap Kidney gene expression profiling test and the iBox prediction algorithm, but these will not be actively used to make any decisions as part of the trial. AlloSure, AlloMap Kidney, and iBox are the three components of the KidneyCare panel developed by CareDx.
The BELASWITCH study is a prospective single-centre study including all kidney transplant patients for whom a conversion from Tacrolimus to Belatacept has been decided by the transplant clinicians of the Grenoble Alpes University Hospital. Each patient will be included at the time of conversion (patients stable on Tacrolimus for at least 6 months) and will be their own control 1 year after conversion to Belatacept. The study has two components: - A "Metabolic" benefit arm: the investigators assume that conversion from Tacrolimus to Belatacept reduces the risk of diabetes by reducing the level of insulin resistance. - An "Infectious" risk arm: measurement of the viral load of Torque Teno Virus to assess the state of immunosuppression of patients. In this sense, the investigators hypothesise that it could serve as a biomarker of immunodepression in this population.
Lung transplant recipients have poor outcomes after COVID-19 infection with mortality. Due to the immunosuppression, they have had poor responses to SARS-CoV-2 vaccine and remain at high risk of poor outcomes. This is a Phase I/II clinical trial to evaluate the safety and immune response from a higher dose mRNA-1273 vaccine among lung transplant recipients who have already received three or four doses of the COVID-19 vaccine.
People living with Systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases (SARDs) face a new and urgent dilemma: immunosuppression increases risk for worse COVID-19 infection, yet an immune stimulation, such as vaccination, could re-activate their disease. Fear of vaccine-related disease reactivation is not of concern in other immunosuppressed groups (e.g. patients receiving chemotherapy or hemodialysis) but in SARDs, disease flare could lead to organ failure or even death. Specific research in this population is therefore critical. Moreover, among SARD patients, those on anti-CD-20 monoclonal antibody (mAb) (i.e. rituximab (anti-CD-20 mAb)), a medication used to treat inflammatory types of arthritis, have extremely low immunity post-COVID-19 mRNA vaccine. This study will test the hypothesis that a booster dose of a COVID-19 vaccine is safe and enhances post-vaccine humoral and cellular responses in SARDs patients on anti-CD-20 mAb treatment. The magnitude of this response depends on the type of COVID-19 vaccine administered and is optimal when the booster dose is a vaccine from a different group than the one used for primary immunization (mix-and-match approach).
Rationale: Despite improved patient and graft survival in renal transplant recipients, still 20% of the patients reaches end-stage renal disease within 5 years after transplantation. Antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR) is one of the major causes of early graft loss and perhaps even more important of late deterioration of graft function Objective: Evaluate the occurrence of antibody mediated rejection (ABMR) and mixed ABMR and cellular/ T-cell mediated rejection (TCMR), in patients treated with the currently prevailing immunosuppressive regimens, and relate them to outcome (graft survival, function, proteinuria, histology) Study design: Clinical cohort study. Study population: patients of >18 years old, about to receive a post mortal of living donor renal transplant with an immunological high risk for ABMR. Main study parameters/endpoints: main study endpoints are the occurrence of ABMR, mixed ABMR/TCMR and renal function after 1 year of follow-up. The main study parameter will be mapping the immune system, including B-cells, (non-)HLA antibodies, interaction between B-cells and T follicular helper cells, and complete immune profiling.
This is a randomized open label study in de novo liver transplant recipients that aims to compare the risk of tacrolimus induced tremors with once daily extended-release formulation, Envarsus, versus the twice daily immediate-release formulation. Both formulations of tacrolimus are currently approved for the prevention of rejection in liver transplant patients.