Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01136395
Other study ID # NTx-RTx-LD-001
Secondary ID 2009-012198-36
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
First received
Last updated
Start date January 2010
Est. completion date June 18, 2019

Study information

Verified date October 2019
Source University of Giessen
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This project comprises immunological and virological analyses within a prospective clinical study of Rituximab (Rtx)-treated blood group incompatible living donor (LD) renal transplant recipients compared to blood group compatible LD recipients without Rtx induction, and of living donor compared to deceased donor renal transplant recipients treated with tacrolimus (Tacr)/mycophenolate sodium (MPS). Aim of this project is to assess short- and long-term effects of immunosuppressive therapy (Rtx induction) and of living donation on immunological and histological parameters of graft outcome and on viral replication (BK virus (BKV), JC virus (JCV), cytomegalovirus (CMV), Epstein Barr virus (EBV)) with the potential to improve long-term graft outcome and to enable risk estimation of virus disease.


Description:

Objective. Blood group incompatible (ABOi) LD renal transplantation represents a recognized treatment modality in Germany. In this setting, ethical considerations allow for a detailed study of short- and long-term immunological and virological effects of Rtx induction therapy, including sequential protocol biopsies. In the proposed project we will perform analyses on peripheral blood, iliac lymph nodes and protocol biopsies. Protocol biopsies are routinely obtained 3 and 12 months posttransplant at the Universities of Giessen and Freiburg. In this prospective, open pilot study, immunological parameters of graft outcome and control of polyomavirus, EBV and CMV replication will be compared between RTx-treated ABOi LD renal transplant recipients (n=25-30, group 1) and blood group compatible LD renal transplant recipients without Rtx induction (n=25-30, group 2) but otherwise comparable immunosuppressive treatment (MPS and Tacr, switch to Tacr-MR (modified release) within 2 weeks posttransplant; follow-up of 5 years). The same analyses will be done in DD renal transplant recipients treated with Tacr (switch to Tacr-ME) and MPS (n=25-30, group 3). This study design allows to analyze the impact of living donation on immunoregulation and virus control (groups 2 versus 3).

Background. There is growing evidence that humoral mechanisms play a major role in chronic allograft dysfunction, which was shown to be significantly associated with de-novo formation of donor-specific antibodies against human leucocyte antigens (HLA). However, B cells appear to act not only in humoral responses against the graft but may play a significant role in T-cell mediated antidonor responses due to their role as effective antigen-presenting cells. This is further suggested by the fact that Rtx is effective in primarily T-cell mediated diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis or multiple sclerosis.

Hypothesis/specific aims. We hypothesize that Rtx induction may alter immunoregulation short- and long-term after renal transplantation with the potential to improve long-term outcome. Graft protective effects of Rtx induction may be provided by B cell depletion and the resulting effects on humoral as well as T cell responses, and also by altered responses after B cell repopulation. Possible negative effects of Rtx on polyomavirus and CMV control as well as protective effects on EBV replication, de-novo monoclonal gammopathy and regulation of lymphoma growth factors (interleukins 6 and 10 (IL-6, IL-10)) will be analyzed. Furthermore, B cell subset analysis in peripheral blood and the probably associated impact of Rtx on B cell depletion in graft draining iliac lymph nodes may enable us to establish an optimized Rtx dosage and thereby allow successful ABOi renal transplantation without the currently observed 15% drop outs.

Preliminary results. We have performed clinical studies showing the predictive power of immune parameters such as regulatory anti-Fab autoantibodies, sCD30, CD4 (cluster of differentiation 4) helper activity, and CD4 cell IL-4 (interleukin 4) and IL-10 (interleukin 10) responses on graft outcome. The long-term effect of Rtx induction therapy and of living donation on these parameters will be analyzed.

Previously, we found that patients at risk of polyomavirus nephropathy may be recognized early posttransplant by sequential reverse transcriptase polymerase chain (rt-PCR) assessment of polyomavirus replication in urine. Sequential rt-PCR testing of polyomavirus replication in urine and plasma will be used to analyze effects of Rtx induction on polyomavirus control.

Proposed methods. Immune parameters will be analyzed mainly pretransplant, 3 months and 1, 2 and 5 years posttransplant. Flow cytometry (including regulatory T cells, B cell subsets, expression of cytokine receptors, costimulatory and adhesion molecules), mitogen-stimulated allogeneic cocultures, protein-A plaque assay (B cell responses, CD4 helper activity), intracellular cytokine analysis of CD4+ and CD8+ (cluster of differentiation 8) T cells, B cells and monocytes, rt-PCR for virological studies (BKV, JCV, CMV, EBV) and immunofluorescent staining of iliac lymph nodes (obtained at time of transplantation) and protocol biopsies will be used. Donor-specific antibodies will be detected using lymphocytotoxicity, HLA class I and II ELISA and Luminex assays. Donor-specificity will be confirmed by T- and B-cell crossmatch with donor cells. Regulatory IgG (immunoglobulin G) and IgA (immunoglobulin A) anti-Fab autoantibodies, neopterin and sCD30 will be assessed by ELISA.

Expected results. We expect that Rtx induction will show an impact on immunological parameters of graft outcome, such as de-novo posttransplant antidonor HLA antibody formation. This pilot study may allow for improved long-term kidney graft outcome in recipients with immunologic risk parameters by virtue of patient-tailored immunosuppressive therapy. In ABOi renal transplantation, this study may prevent the current 15% drop out rates by allowing an optimized Rtx dosage based on the intended dose response analysis (B cell subset analysis in blood and graft draining lymph nodes). Furthermore, this study will allow risk estimation of Rtx administration with respect to CMV and polyomavirus replication, and may provide clues concerning protection against EBV replication and posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease. The latter point is of great clinical importance in patients with an enhanced PTLD (posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease) risk such as EBV negative recipients of EBV positive grafts.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 85
Est. completion date June 18, 2019
Est. primary completion date June 18, 2019
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- De-novo kidney transplantation

- Deceased donors (blood group compatible) and living donors (blood group incompatible / blood group compatible)

- First, second and third renal transplants

- Immunized and non-immunized graft recipients

- Age of recipients 18 years or older

- Negative pregnancy test before transplantation

Exclusion Criteria:

- Contra-indications to use Tacr and MPS, respectively

- Contra-indications to use Rtx in the group of ABOi LD transplants

- Chronic hepatitis B, C or HIV infection

- Recurrent infectious disease

- Previous hepatitis B, if no prophylactic antiviral therapy is used

- Previous tuberculosis

- Hemoglobin<8,5g/dl, thrombocytes<80.000/ul or leucocytes<3000/ul

- Previous vaccination with a living vaccine <4 weeks pretransplant

- Significant enterogastric disease such as diverticulitis (contra-indicates MPS treatment)

- Children and adolescents (age less than 18 years)

- Pregnancy and breast-feeding women

- Refusal of an effective contraception in women capable of bearing children

- Combined transplantations such as simultaneous islet/kidney transplants

Study Design


Intervention

Drug:
Rituximab
375mg/m2 4 weeks before ABOi LD transplantation
Procedure:
living donor transplantation
living donor transplantation (ABO compatible) to be compared with deceased donor transplantation (ABO compatible) in its impact on immunological parameters of graft outcome and on viral replication (CMV, EBV, BK/JC), respectively
deceased donor transplantation
deceased donor transplantation (ABO compatible) to be compared with living donor transplantation (ABO compatible) in its impact on immunological parameters of graft outcome and on viral replication (CMV, EBV, BK virus (BKV), JC virus (JCV)), respectively

Locations

Country Name City State
Germany Department of Internal Medicine, University of Giessen Giessen

Sponsors (5)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Giessen Astellas Pharma US, Inc., German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg University, Novartis

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Germany, 

References & Publications (10)

Daniel V, Naujokat C, Sadeghi M, Renner FC, Weimer R, Opelz G. Association of high IFN-gamma plasma levels with low B-cell counts in renal transplant recipients with stable long-term graft function. Clin Transplant. 2010 Mar-Apr;24(2):281-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1399-0012.2009.01067.x. Epub 2009 Aug 27. — View Citation

Hackstein H, Renner FC, Bohnert A, Nockher A, Frommer T, Bein G, Weimer R. Dendritic cell deficiency in the blood of kidney transplant patients on long-term immunosuppression: results of a prospective matched-cohort study. Am J Transplant. 2005 Dec;5(12):2945-53. — View Citation

Sadeghi M, Daniel V, Weimer R, Wiesel M, Hergesell O, Opelz G. Differential early posttransplant cytokine responses in living and cadaver donor renal allografts. Transplantation. 2003 Apr 27;75(8):1351-5. — View Citation

Staak A, Renner F, Suesal C, Dietrich H, Rainer L, Kamali-Ernst S, Ernst W, Padberg W, Opelz G, Weimer R. Immunoglobulin induction therapy in renal transplant recipients: Effects on immunoglobulin and regulatory antibody levels. Transplant Proc. 2006 Dec;38(10):3483-5. — View Citation

Süsal C, Döhler B, Opelz G. Graft-protective role of high pretransplantation IgA-anti-Fab autoantibodies: confirmatory evidence obtained in more than 4000 kidney transplants. The Collaborative Transplant Study. Transplantation. 2000 Apr 15;69(7):1337-40. — View Citation

Süsal C, Pelzl S, Döhler B, Opelz G. Identification of highly responsive kidney transplant recipients using pretransplant soluble CD30. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2002 Jun;13(6):1650-6. — View Citation

Weimer R, Melk A, Daniel V, Friemann S, Padberg W, Opelz G. Switch from cyclosporine A to tacrolimus in renal transplant recipients: impact on Th1, Th2, and monokine responses. Hum Immunol. 2000 Sep;61(9):884-97. — View Citation

Weimer R, Mytilineos J, Feustel A, Preiss A, Daniel V, Grimm H, Wiesel M, Opelz G. Mycophenolate mofetil-based immunosuppression and cytokine genotypes: effects on monokine secretion and antigen presentation in long-term renal transplant recipients. Transplantation. 2003 Jun 27;75(12):2090-9. — View Citation

Weimer R, Staak A, Süsal C, Streller S, Yildiz S, Pelzl S, Renner F, Dietrich H, Daniel V, Rainer L, Kamali-Ernst S, Ernst W, Padberg W, Opelz G. ATG induction therapy: long-term effects on Th1 but not on Th2 responses. Transpl Int. 2005 Feb;18(2):226-36. — View Citation

Weimer R, Süsal C, Yildiz S, Staak A, Pelzl S, Renner F, Dietrich H, Daniel V, Kamali-Ernst S, Ernst W, Padberg W, Opelz G. Post-transplant sCD30 and neopterin as predictors of chronic allograft nephropathy: impact of different immunosuppressive regimens. Am J Transplant. 2006 Aug;6(8):1865-74. Epub 2006 Jun 9. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Impact of Rtx on immune parameters predictive of graft outcome including B cell responses immune parameters of graft outcome: see "detailed description" 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of living donation on immune parameters predictive of graft outcome including B cell responses parameters of graft outcome: see "detailed description" 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of Rtx on virus replication outcome measure description: EBV PCR (in blood) 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of Rtx on virus replication outcome measure description: CMV PCR (in blood) 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of Rtx on virus replication outcome measure description: BKV PCR (in blood) 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of Rtx on virus replication outcome measure description: BKV PCR (in urine) 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of Rtx on virus replication outcome measure description: JCV PCR (in blood) 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of Rtx on virus replication outcome measure description: JCV PCR (in urine) 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of living donation on virus replication outcome measure description: EBV PCR (in blood) 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of living donation on virus replication outcome measure description: CMV PCR (in blood) 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of living donation on virus replication outcome measure description: BKV PCR (in blood) 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of living donation on virus replication outcome measure description: BKV PCR (in urine) 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of living donation on virus replication outcome measure description: JCV PCR (in blood) 5 years posttransplant
Primary Impact of living donation on virus replication outcome measure description: JCV PCR (in urine) 5 years posttransplant
Secondary Patient survival patient survival 5 years posttransplant will be analyzed 5 years posttransplant
Secondary Graft survival Graft survival 5 years posttransplant will be analyzed 5 years posttransplant
Secondary Graft function and proteinuria 5-year graft function will be analyzed by serum creatinine and measured creatinine clearance, proteinuria by proteinuria within a 24h urine collection period 5 years posttransplant
Secondary Graft function 5-year graft function will be analyzed by serum creatinine and measured creatinine clearance, proteinuria by proteinuria within a 24h urine collection period 5 years posttransplant
Secondary Graft function 5-year graft function will be analyzed by measured creatinine clearance 5 years posttransplant
Secondary Proteinuria 5-year proteinuria will be analyzed urine collected 24 hours 5 years posttransplant
Secondary Incidence of acute rejection incidence of biopsy proven acute rejection within 1 year posttransplant will be analyzed 1 year posttransplant
Secondary Incidence of acute rejection incidence of biopsy proven acute rejection within 2 years posttransplant will be analyzed 2 years posttransplant
Secondary Incidence of acute rejection incidence of biopsy proven acute rejection within 5 years posttransplant will be analyzed 5 years posttransplant
Secondary Incidence of chronic allograft dysfunction Chronic allograft dysfunction (progressive decline of graft function) will be analyzed at 5 years posttransplant. 5 years posttransplant
Secondary Incidence of severe infectious disease severe infectious disease as defined by need for in-hospital treatment 5 years posttransplant
Secondary Incidence of malignancy all types of malignancies within 5 years posttransplant will be evaluated 5 years posttransplant
Secondary Incidence of side effects associated with Rtx all side effects of Rtx treatment which have been described in literature, will be listed 5 years posttransplant
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04910867 - APOL1 Genetic Testing Program for Living Donors N/A
Completed NCT02723591 - To Compare the Effects of Immediate-release Tacrolimus and Astagraf XL on Donor-Specific Antibody (DSA) Formation and the Development of Immune Activation (IA) in de Novo Kidney Transplant Recipients Phase 4
Completed NCT05945511 - Silent Gallbladder Stone in Kidney Transplantation Recipients: Should it be Treated?
Completed NCT02234349 - Bile Acids and Incretins in Pancreas Kidney Transplant Patients N/A
Completed NCT04496401 - PK Study in Diabetic Transplant récipients : From Twice-daily Tacrolimus to Once-daily Extended-release Tacrolimus Phase 4
Recruiting NCT05917795 - Endoscopic Sleeve Gastroplasty With Endomina® for the Treatment of Obesity in Kidney Transplant Candidates N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05934383 - Safety and Efficacy of Ultrasound Renal Denervation in Kidney Transplantation Patients With Uncontrolled Hypertension N/A
Withdrawn NCT04936971 - Introduction of mTor Inhibitors and the Activation of the Cytomegalovirus (CMV) -Specific Cellular Immune Response Phase 4
Not yet recruiting NCT04540640 - Oxygenated Machine Preservation in Kidney Transplantation N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03090828 - Economic Evaluation of an Education Platform for Patients With End-stage Renal Disease N/A
Recruiting NCT02908139 - Noninvasive Perioperative Monitoring of Arterial Stiffness, Volume and Nutritional Status in Stable Renal Transplant Recipients N/A
Terminated NCT02417870 - Ultra-low Dose Subcutaneous IL-2 in Renal Transplantation Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT02560558 - Bela 8 Week Dosing Phase 4
Recruiting NCT02154815 - Pre-emptive Kidney Transplantation Quality of Life N/A
Completed NCT02235571 - iChoose Decision Kidney Aid for End-Stage Renal Disease Patients N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT01905514 - ImPRoving Adherence to Immunosuppressive Therapy by Mobile Internet Application in Solid Organ Transplant Patients N/A
Completed NCT02147210 - Chronic Transplant Glomerulopathy and Regulation of Expression of Ephrin B1 N/A
Recruiting NCT01699360 - The Biomarker for Immunosuppressive Agents Metabolism in Chinese Renal Transplant Recipients Phase 4
Completed NCT01655563 - Pharmacogenetic Trial of Tacrolimus After Pediatric Transplantation Phase 2
Terminated NCT01436305 - Optimization of NULOJIX® Usage As A Means of Avoiding CNI and Steroids in Renal Transplantation Phase 2