Immunosuppression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Immune Tolerance and Alloreactivity in Liver Transplant Recipients on Different Monotherapy Immunosuppressive Agents
This study is being done with the purpose of trying to understand if and why transplant recipients may develop tolerance to their transplanted organ. Tolerance means being able to lower or take away immunosuppression (anti-rejection medications) without causing organ rejection.
Life-long immunosuppressive therapy is typically required in the majority of liver allograft
recipients. In the early years of liver transplantation (LT), the majority of deaths
occurred secondary to graft loss from acute or chronic rejection despite immunosuppression
(IS). With the advent of more powerful and specific IS agents, e.g. calcineurin-inhibitors
(CNIs) cyclosporine (CyA) and tacrolimus (TAC), graft rejection rates significantly declined
and short and long term graft/patient survival dramatically improved. However, along with
the advance in survival rates came the adverse effects of long term immunosuppression (IS),
e.g. morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular events, renal insufficiency, infectious
complications, recurrent viral hepatitis and malignancy. These events are exacerbated by
pre-existing conditions and an aging transplant population. Immunosuppression tapering or
withdrawal could lower the incidence of these complications and improve long term graft and
patient survival.
Therefore, the study proposed is a laboratory investigation (using blood samples collected
from the subjects) comparing immune tolerance and alloreactivity profiles in LT recipients
on monotherapy IS or converted to rapamycin monotherapy, to determine tolerogenic properties
of the different IS agents. Knowledge of these properties would support the need for
specific IS therapy to promote immune tolerance and consider IS withdrawal.
Monotherapy patients will be identified by the organ transplant database and medical charts
at Northwestern. Patients will be invited to participate in the study and asked to undergo
venipunctures for our analysis. Patient demographics, laboratories and other clinical data
will be recorded. Patients on CNI monotherapy are continuously being identified for
conversion to rapamycin monotherapy during clinic visits or chart reviews at Northwestern.
Patients are selected for conversion due to significant CNI side effects, e.g. chronic
kidney disease (creatinine clearance < 50 in the absence of significant proteinuria > 1g,
poorly controlled diabetes mellitus/hypertension/hyperlipidemia, peripheral neuropathy). In
general, patients are converted from CNIs to rapamycin over 2-3 weeks once therapeutic
rapamycin levels are achieved.
Study procedures will be carried out by the investigators and associated personnel. Patients
will be assigned a number in numerical order, to remove patient identifiers from the data
analysis. A separate screening/enrollment log will be kept separate from the data. Baseline
characteristics of the patients will be recorded: age, sex, liver disease, past medical
history, history of acute rejection or other graft dysfunction, other post-LT complications,
previous and current IS regimens. Monotherapy patients (10 from CyA, Tacrolimus, and MMF; 5
rapamycin) will be identified as above and asked to participate. Blood will be drawn at one
time point for the following analysis:
- Dendritic cell assays: myeloid vs. lymphoid (CD11c; CD123); maturation and ability to
process antigens (CD83; CD205); markers that have been shown to induce regulatory T
cells (ILT3; ILT4).
- Regulatory/Suppressor Cells (CD4+CD25+FOXP3+CD127low; and CD8+ CD28- FOXP3+CD127low
cells).
- HLA microchimerism & HLA G
Ten patients who have been pre-selected for rapamycin conversion will have the above assays
performed two weeks prior to conversion and 3-6 months following conversion. They will also
have liver function and drug level tests.
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Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Prospective
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