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Rejection of Renal Transplant clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03317925 Completed - Renal Transplant Clinical Trials

Renal Transplant Injury and the Renin-Angiotensin System in Kids (RETASK)

RETASK
Start date: July 16, 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

In pediatric kidney transplant patients, rejection, medication toxicity and ischemia cause early and chronic renal allograft injury, which reduces graft lifespan and patient survival. Early detection of injury would facilitate prevention and treatment. The gold standard surveillance biopsy has limitations including delayed discovery of injury. No noninvasive test identifies graft injury before it is clinically apparent. This project's goal is to develop a novel early marker of subclinical graft injury to facilitate prompt recognition and treatment.

NCT ID: NCT03289650 Completed - Clinical trials for End Stage Renal Disease

Extended Release Tacrolimus vs. Twice-Daily Tacrolimus

Start date: September 5, 2017
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The overall aim of the study is to prospectively investigate the impact of two maintenance calcineurin inhibitor immunosuppressive regimens: once-daily extended release tacrolimus and twice-daily tacrolimus on subpopulations of T and B cells and alloreactive T cells as well as on renal allograft function.

NCT ID: NCT03206801 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Kidney Transplant; Complications

Urine CXCL10 Monitoring Trial in Kidney Transplant

Start date: April 3, 2018
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This is a Phase II-III multi-center prospective randomized controlled clinical trial of incident adult renal transplant patients. The primary objective of this study is to determine if the early treatment of rejection, as detected by urinary CXCL10, will improve renal allograft outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT01315067 Completed - Clinical trials for Rejection of Renal Transplant

Diagnosis of Acute Rejection in Renal Transplant Patients by Urine Mass Spectrometry

Start date: October 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Reliable and timely detection of acute rejections in renal transplant patients is important to preserve the graft function and to prevent premature graft failure. The current gold standard for the rejection diagnosis is a renal biopsy which is usually performed upon an unexplained decline in the graft function (determined by serum creatinine or clearance). Because of the insensitivity of creatinine determinations and the invasiveness of renal biopsies, non-invasive tests have been suggested to diagnose acute rejection including mass spectrometry (MS) analysis of urine samples. The ability of MS analysis to detect acute rejection has been demonstrated in small studies on selected patients but evidence is lacking that this test is efficacious in the routine setting of the post-transplant patient care. Based on our previous work that established urine peptide sets for acute rejection by MS, a prospective, multicentre diagnostic phase III study will be executed. The aim of the study is to prove that this test is as equally effective as the allograft biopsy to detect acute rejection in patients that undergo a biopsy for unexplained renal dysfunction. The perspective of this approach is that the test could be used either in place of the biopsy or as decision guidance whether a biopsy is necessary to confirm the presence of rejection. Another perspective is that the MS test (respectively, a simplified test system derived from this method) could be used in the regular post-transplant surveillance for acute rejection, in place of the relatively insensitive procedure with periodic monitoring of the graft function by creatinine determinations.