View clinical trials related to Kidney Transplantation.
Filter by:To evaluate the safety and feasibility of transplanting kidneys from Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infected donors into recipients without HCV infection
Efficacy and Safety of My-Rept® (Mycophenolate Mofetil 500mg/Tab. or 250mg/Cap.) in Combination with Tacrolimus, Methylprednisolone, Simulect in Kidney Transplant Patients
Kidney transplantation is the best available treatment option for patients with end stage renal disease. However, kidney transplantation requires life-long use of immunosuppressive medication. Because of the high cost of these medications we need to carefully evaluate the cost-effectiveness of each drug regimen, especially in low-middle income countries. The objective of this clinical trial is to compare the efficiency and cost of two immunosuppressive protocols after living donor kidney transplantation: (1) antithymocyte globulin, tacrolimus, azathioprine and prednisolone versus (2) basiliximab, tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil and prednisolone.
Kidney and liver transplantation are the treatment of choice and are often the last therapeutic option offered to patients with chronic renal and liver failure. More than 70% of kidneys and liver available for transplantation are obtained from donors following neurological death. Unfortunately, compared to living donation, transplant function, graft survival, and recipient survival are consistently inferior with kidneys and liver from neurologically deceased donors. This difference lies with the exacerbated pro-inflammatory state characteristic of deceased donors. Indeed, when neurologic death occurs, the immune system releases substances in the blood that could harm organs and particularly the liver and the kidneys. We believe that achieving a better understanding of the inflammatory processes of organ donors could be greatly informative to design future randomized controlled trial assessing the effect of personalized immunosuppressive therapy on organ donors to ultimately improve the care provided to donors so as to increase the number of organs available for transplantation and enhancing the survival of received grafts
In literature there is a huge amount of works demonstrating the direct correlation between volemic overload or fluid deficit and hypoperfusion and the increase in the rate of major postoperative complications in patients with high cardiovascular risk and chronic renal failure candidate to kidney transplantation from cadaver. It is also widely demonstrated that in certain populations with high surgical and post-operative complications risk, the adoption of targeted haemodynamic and clinical-therapeutic management protocols is indicated. The current trend is therefore to guarantee greater precision in the intraoperative management of patients undergoing kidney transplantation from cadaver by using a specific protocol that can be framed in the recent and innovative concept of Perioperative Gold Directed Therapy (PGDT), resulting from the adoption of an advanced minimally invasive hemodynamic monitoring technology with a special sensor called FloTrac (Edwards Lifesciences), already extensively tested in an extensive case series of high perioperative risk patients underwent to major abdominal surgery, major vascular surgery, major orthopedic surgery and cardio-thoracic surgery. In the present study there will be enrolled all patients who are candidates for kidney transplant from cadaver at the University Hospital "G. Rodolico" of Catania that meet the inclusion criteria of the study and will give their informed consent to participation. The enrolled patients will be monitored for a maximum period of 7 days from transplantation. As control group there will be considered an historical cohort of patients who underwent kidney transplantation from cadaver in 2015, in which a PGDT protocol was not used, but a common hemodynamic monitoring, based on parameters such as central venous pressure and / or invasive arterial pressure, was performed according to the international guidelines.
The purpose of this study is to identify the influence of genetic and clinical factors on the clinical outcomes of kidney transplant patients with tacrolimus (TAC) based immunosuppression in Taiwan.
To further develop personalized medicine in kidney transplantation and improve transplant patient outcomes, attention has been given to define early surrogate endpoints that might aid therapeutic interventions, and help clinical decision-making. To adequately predict transplant patients' individual risks of allograft loss and patients' complications, this would require a complex integration of data, including: donor data, recipient characteristics, transplant characteristics, biopsies results, immunosuppressive regimen, allograft infections, acute kidney injuries, recipient immune profiles, protocol and per cause biopsies and imaging (PET/CT imaging). This project aims: 1. Assessed the usefulness of 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging in kidney transplantation recipients presenting with suspected acute rejection who underwent a transplant needle biopsy; 2. To develop a prognostic risk score to predict kidney allograft survival; 3. To evaluate the impact of corticoids withdrawal on long term outcomes (risk of rejection and impact on bone mineral density); 4. Evaluate the type and the frequencies of complications in our kidney transplant population
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety and of Once-Daily Tacrolimus (TacroBell SR Cap.) in patients who received renal transplantation.
ADPKD is the most common form of hereditary kidney disease and is known to occur in 1 of 400 to 1000 population in the U.S. ADPKD consists of 2.8% of patients receiving kidney transplantation in our center. It is known that ADPKD is associated with vascular anomalies, including abdominal aneurysms, valvular anomalies and especially intracranial aneurysms. Intracranial aneurysms occur in 9~12% of the ADPKD population which is higher than 2~3% in the general population and is known to be associated with PKD1 or PKD2 heritage. Until now, most of the studies regarding intracranial aneurysms in ADPKD are conducted in animal models, and there are only few cellular studies conducted from human samples. While performing kidney transplantation to ESRD ADPKD patients, arterial tissues from nephrectomy specimens can be obtained. The objective of this study is to investigate the mechanism of intracranial aneurysm in ADPKD patients by analyzing iliac and renal artery characteristics.
This study will evaluate the safety and feasibility of treatment involving a single infusion of donor-derived regulatory dendritic cells (DCreg) in first time, living donor renal transplant recipients. DCreg will be prepared from monocytes obtained by leukapheresis from prospective (non-mobilized) living kidney donors and infused into the respective recipients 7 days before renal transplantation. This study will enroll 28 subjects (14 recipients, 14 donors). The duration of follow-up will be: - 1 week following the leukapheresis procedure for donors and - 2 years following their DCreg infusion for kidney recipients.