View clinical trials related to Kidney Transplantation.
Filter by:This is a prospective, multi-site, observational study with a matched control group. The primary objective is to evaluate change in renal function over time in recipients of kidney transplants who are undergoing OmniGrafTM monitoring in conjunction with patient medication-related burden monitoring.
This research study is being done to learn if an experimental treatment of infusing allogeneic adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (allo-A-MSC ) directly into the renal artery is safe and can help reduce inflammation in the transplanted kidney and treat rejection.
Children and young people (CYP) with chronic kidney disease (CKD) say that physical activity, school, social activities and tiredness are the main issues they want to improve. Kidney-BEAM, a digital health platform designed for adults with CKD, provides a combination of live and on-demand exercise classes to encourage physical activity and movement but is currently not available to CYP with CKD. Therefore, investigators will work with CYP with CKD, parents/carers and healthcare professionals to find out if a CYP-related version (Kidney BEAM-KIDS), could be developed to encourage exercise options that are enjoyable, safe and sustainable. In this project, CYP who have received a KT will be invited by their local clinical teams to try out Kidney BEAM-KIDS; this will include exercise-based classes delivered in age-appropriate groups where CYP will be able to get peer support. Kidney BEAM-KIDS will include features to help motivation such as badges and celebrations when reaching targets. The CYP will be asked to participate in discussions and complete several questionnaires at three time-points over 12 months to explore how CYP feel about themselves and aspects of their lives such as friendships and school, how physically active they are, their preferred types of foods, activities they do, and their health. This will help the investigators a) understand how acceptable Kidney BEAM-KIDS is to CYP, b) determine whether it needs any changes/improvements, and c) identify key issues around how best to gather data and answer research questions about physical activity benefits in CYP with CKD.
Randomized controlled trial of a curriculum intervention teaching patients to eat a whole-food plant-based dietary pattern versus standard of care in kidney transplant recipients within the first few months of transplant
The objective of the proposed study it to perform a pilot clinical trial both to establish feasibility of applying a computational, augmented intelligence based approach, Phenotypic Precision Medicine (PPM), to optimizing combination drug therapy and to gather preliminary data to support a larger fully powered multi-center clinical trial. The key rationale for this clinical selection is that we have the technical, biological, and medical expertise in this disease, a wealth of experience in the use of PPM in both in vitro and the clinical setting, and a robust and integrated transplant program with a well-functioning clinical trial infrastructure.
The aim of the study is to evaluate the feasibility of this bubble and surface oxygenation and to determine the optimal timing of surface oxygenation (continuous versus intermittent) as alternative for membrane-oxygenated kidneys, originating from DCD donors, during HMP on early graft function in clinical practice.
The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of physical activity program according to motivational interviewing based on the Transtheoretical Model on cardiovascular risk factors, physical activity level, physical activity behavior, physical activity barriers and gait parameters in kidney transplant recipients.
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.
This is an investigator-initiated, randomized controlled trial in adult KTRs (N=50) with stable allograft function to assess: 1) the reversibility of the expected acute changes in eGFR with sotagliflozin (donated by Lexicon); 2) proportion of patients completing the protocol according to different eGFR reporting strategies (using a predefined algorithm to manage the expected pharmacological effect of sotagliflozin on eGFR); 3) safety and tolerability of sotagliflozin.
In this study the researchers want to retrospectively compare non-refluxing ureteroneocystostomy (UNC techniques to reflux UNC techniques in paediatric kidney recipients with regard to urinary tract infections and uteral obstruction.