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Renal Transplant Rejection clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Renal Transplant Rejection.

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NCT ID: NCT04114188 Completed - Clinical trials for Renal Transplant Rejection

Tacrolimus After rATG and Infliximab Induction Immunosuppression (RIMINI)

RIMINI
Start date: December 15, 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

International multicenter open-label single-arm confidence-interval-estimation based Phase II clinical trial, aiming to estimate a plausible range of the proportion of patients experiencing efficacy failure in the population, to provide evidence for efficacy and safety of the induction regimen with rATG and infliximab and a go/no go rule for further clinical development.

NCT ID: NCT03512431 Completed - Clinical trials for Renal Transplant Rejection

Dose Adjustment of Tacrolimus Based on Home Sampling in Renal Transplant Recipients

TacDrop
Start date: April 4, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Repeated 12-hour pharmacokinetic (PK) investigations in renal transplant recipients for parallel sampling of standard venous bloods samples and finger prick micro samples (Mitra tips). Primary aim to validate the micro sampling tacrolimus concentrations against venous blood concentrations.

NCT ID: NCT03140514 Completed - Clinical trials for Renal Transplant Rejection

Urine CXCL10 Chemokine Monitoring Post-renal Transplant

Start date: September 28, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In this study investigators will investigate whether early treatment of allograft rejection, as detected by urine CXCL10-monitoring, improves outcomes in renal allograft recipients.

NCT ID: NCT02866682 Completed - Clinical trials for Renal Transplant Rejection

Prospective Study Comparing Brand and Generic Immunosuppression on Transplant Outcomes, Adherence, & Immune Response in Kidney Transplant Recipients

Start date: March 1, 2018
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

As the patents for brand-name immunosuppressive medications expire, there is increasing interest in using generic immunosuppressive drugs. However, despite pharmacokinetic studies showing bioequivalence, questions remain regarding the clinical impact of use of generic immunosuppression. The most important immunosuppressive agent in the modern transplant era is arguably tacrolimus, a calcineurin-inhibitor with a narrow therapeutic index. This study seeks to answer the question regarding the clinical impact of generic tacrolimus use as measured primarily by acute rejection, loss of graft function, and patient death through a randomized trial of 2 phases: Brand tacrolimus only, and Generic A tacrolimus only. Given that kidney transplantations are the most commonly performed transplants with well-defined measures of rejection and graft failure, this organs will be studied in a six-center study designed to accrue the target number of transplant recipients within the one-year study period. The study has now been branched off into 2 phases. Phase 1: consists of randomization of patients onto brand and generic tacrolimus. This was completed once 40 brand patients were enrolled. Phase 2: consists of patients being enrolled only on generic tacrolimus (standard of care from subject's insurance). This will be completed once there is a total of 160 generic participants. 200 participants total in the study.

NCT ID: NCT02733029 Completed - Clinical trials for Renal Transplant Rejection

Contrast Enhanced Ultrasonography to Detect Human Renal Transplant Rejection

Start date: May 30, 2018
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine the feasibility and efficacy of detecting kidney transplant rejection using contrast enhance ultrasonography with the contrast agent Sonazoid.

NCT ID: NCT02581436 Completed - Clinical trials for Renal Transplant Rejection

Testing Immunosuppression Threshold in Renal Allografts To Extend eGFR

TITRATE
Start date: September 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates the addition of "Kidney Solid Organ Rejection Test" (kSORT), in the clinical follow-up of renal transplant recipients, compared to clinical standard surveillance in the first two years after kidney transplantation. The design of the study is a partially blinded, randomized control trial of patients with living and deceased donor. The recruitment will be in a third level attention hospital in Mexico city (Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán). The main outcomes are the rate and grade of acute rejection, histologic chronic index of the one year protocol biopsy and glomerular filtration rate.

NCT ID: NCT02500251 Completed - Clinical trials for Renal Transplant Rejection

Belimumab Impacting Transplant Eligibility

Start date: June 2015
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study is a prospective, open label, phase I/II pilot study.

NCT ID: NCT02377193 Completed - Clinical trials for Renal Transplant Rejection

Simulect Versus ATG in Sensitized Renal Transplant Patient

SATIR
Start date: September 2013
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Induction therapy by either T-cell depleting polyclonal antibodies such as anti-thymocyte globulins (ATG) or non-depleting anti-interleukine 2 receptor monoclonal antibodies (anti-CD25 moAb: basiliximab or daclizumab) are used to prevent acute rejection, especially in highly sensitized patients. Both induction therapy regimens have a different tolerance profile. Infections and haematological side-effects are more frequently reported in patients receiving ATG. The aim of the pilot study is to evaluate ATG and basiliximab induction therapy in de novo sensitized kidney-transplant patients (incompatible grafts rate ≥ 50%) without donor specific antibodies (DSAs) detected by Luminex.

NCT ID: NCT02284464 Completed - Clinical trials for Renal Transplant Rejection

Steroid Withdrawal and Donor-specific Anti-HLA Antibodies in Renal Transplant Patients

Start date: February 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Steroids are one of the pillars of immunosuppression for kidney transplant patients but their use is associated with a high rate of complications. Withdrawal of steroids reduces some metabolic and cardiovascular complications, but it may increase the risk of acute rejection. However, little is known about whether steroid withdrawal is associated with the generation of anti-HLA donor-specific antibodies (DSA) and the relation between DSA and clinical and histological data. The aim of this study is to compare the incidence of de novo anti-HLA DSA in stable kidney transplant patients after withdrawing the steroids 3 months after the transplantation as compared with patients who continue with steroids. The hypothesis is that steroid withdrawal will increase the presence of de novo anti-HLA DSA in stable kidney transplant patients

NCT ID: NCT02006108 Completed - Clinical trials for Renal Transplant Rejection

Imaging Kidney Transplant Rejection Using Ferumoxytol-Enhanced Magnetic Resonance

Start date: November 27, 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this study is to develop a non-invasive imaging test for in vivo detection of kidney transplant rejection. The hypotheses are that 1) Ferumoxytol-MRI can generate accurate estimates of tissue iron concentrations and tissue macrophages. 2) The signal given by a renal allograft on Ferumoxytol-MRI demonstrates significant differences between rejected and non-rejected transplants.