View clinical trials related to Kidney Transplantation.
Filter by:The purpose of this study was to assess whether a new drug, Nulojix® (belatacept), would minimize serious long term side effects associated with anti-rejection medications while still protecting the new kidney from damage. The researchers also wanted to learn more about the safety of this treatment and long term health of the transplanted kidney.
The purpose of this study, a follow up to study FG506-CL-0403, is to see how safe and effective Modigraf® is (Part A) and to see how safe and effective it is to change your child's medication from Modigraf® to Prograf® (Part B).
The aim of project DIVAT-URO (Données Informatisées et Validées en Transplantation - Urology) is to organize a thematic network in urology traced on NetWork DIVAT to supplement the medical and biological data of DIVAT existing cohort with parameters of surgical transplantation of kidney and pancreas. These data will concern the transplantation itself and the events and complications related to surgery occurring throughout the follow-up. The collection will involve patients in the cohort DIVAT and future patients. This project will allow us to have the sufficiency of surgical transplantation by increasing the quantity and quality of information gathered thus avoiding the biases commonly upbraided against the retrospective studies. Finally, by supplementing it with new parameters, it will strengthen the medical and scientific interest of the cohort DIVAT and will open new perspectives for clinical trials in surgery and work in epidemiology.Networking of urologists and the expansion of the base DIVAT would carry out research in epidemiology and factors that may play a role in the outcome of renal and pancreatic transplantation. It would also help to define good practices. The first study from the proposed network DIVAT-Uro is assessing the impact of vesico-ureteric reflux on the occurrence of urinary tract infections and effects on survival of the transplant in the recipient adult.
The purpose of this research study is to determine if adding or increasing the dose of CellCept while lowering the dose of tacrolimus (Prograf or Advagraf) or cyclosporine (Neoral), and/or steroids can reduce the likelihood of developing coronary heart disease in the next 10 years. The investigators will calculate the change in risk of developing coronary heart disease using the Framingham score. The Framingham score is a mathematical equation that includes the following information: Age, Gender, Diabetes status, Smoking status, Lipids, Blood Pressure. The Framingham score estimates how likely it is that someone will develop coronary heart disease over the next 10 years.
The purpose of this study is to check the T and B cells of the immune system in 50 newly transplanted patients whom have received a kidney (50 recipients and 50 donors totaling 100 anticipated participants). This will be done to see how the Standard of Care (SOC) anti-rejection medication, Alemtuzumab (Campath 1-H®) affects these cells- Campath 1-H® reduces the number of T cells produced by one's body.
The purpose of this study is to test whether a dosing regimen of eculizumab in addition to standard posttransplant care in positive crossmatch deceased donor kidney transplant recipients will reduce the incidence of acute humoral rejection (AHR). Patients included in this study will be those who have demonstrable anti-human leukocyte antigen (HLA) antibody specific for their deceased donor. It is our hypothesis that blockade of terminal complement activation with eculizumab at the time of transplant in combination with our current protocols will reduce the incidence of AHR in recipients of deceased donor kidney transplants who have anti-donor HLA antibody
The purpose of this study is to try to determine if the drug eculizumab can help prevent antibody-mediated rejection in patients undergoing a kidney transplant from a living donor with a different blood type than their own.
This randomized trial will enroll adult recipients of HLA-identical living kidney transplants who are at least 1 year post-transplant. All subjects will be taking Prograf (tacrolimus) or cyclosporine and mycophenolic acid (CellCept or Myfortic) and then be randomized (1:2) to either continue calcineurin inhibitors or to taper off of calcineurin inhibitors. The hypothesis is that mycophenolic acid monotherapy permits long-term rejection-free renal allograft function in the absence of long-term calcineurin inhibitors in this fully matched renal transplant cohort.
The objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of conversion from tacrolimus to sirolimus early after kidney transplantation in patients with delayed graft function (DGF)and slow graft function (SGF) in improving graft function and delaying chronic allograft nephropathy. The investigators hypothesize that conversion from tacrolimus to sirolimus in renal transplant recipients with DGF/SGF in early months after surgery will improve graft function and decrease the progression of graft fibrosis.
Transplant recipients have a high risk to develop skin malignancies. This effect depends on the one hand on the immunosuppressive drugs themselves (i.e., azathioprine) and relates on the other hand on the dosage (i.e., calcineurin-inhibitors). Based on the encouraging results of previous, retrospective studies on patients treated with Sirolimus (SRL), these patients should be switched to an immunosuppressive regime including SRL, decreasing the dosage of calcineurin-inhibitors or converting from former immunosuppression. A conversion to a SRL-based therapy is effective in immunosuppression and safe regarding graft and patient survival. This study was designed to assess whether a switch to a SRL-immunosuppressive therapy decreases the incidence/reoccurrence of skin neoplasm.