View clinical trials related to Renal Transplantation.
Filter by:The goal of the research proposed in the current application is to first define how much antibody aging renal transplant and dialysis recipients make after they are vaccinated with the pneumonia vaccine and how this compares to similar aged persons with good renal function and healthy young adults. The investigators will study differences in the kind of B cells and markers on the B cells that are known to be important in the response to the pneumonia vaccine in aging renal transplant and aging dialysis recipients compared to similarly aged and young healthy controls. Finally, the investigators will study how safe the pneumonia vaccine is in aging renal transplants. The answers to these questions will help in designing a better vaccine for older people with a renal transplant or on dialysis.
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.
To compare in a prospective randomised way the effect of two different immunosuppressive regimens - mTOR-based regimen or CNI-based regimen - on the progression of coronary artery calcification in renal transplant patients measured at baseline, 1, 2, and 3 years after transplantation.
This study wants to address whether a calcineurin-inhibitor (CNI)-free regimen six weeks after transplantation for Eurotransplant Senior Program (ESP) patients is as safe and well tolerated as standard treatment but optimizing immunosuppressive therapy with benefits in renal function, new-onset diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular risk, cancer and allograft nephropathy.
To determine if conversion to enteric coated MPA allows an escalated dose of mycophenolic acid (MPA) to be tolerated in patients experiencing gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms
The hypothesis of this study is that lymphocyte depletion by Campath-1H and rituximab will obviate the need for long-term calcineurin inhibitors in renal transplantation. Most successful strategies to date have relied on the use of either tacrolimus or cyclosporine for an indefinite period of time. However, the advantage of a long term, calcineurin inhibitor free regimen may include improved renal allograft function, a lower incidence of hypertension, diabetes, and less drug related side effects. This is a non-randomized open-label pilot trial in 30 adult renal transplant patients. Subjects will receive 2 doses of Campath-1H (30mg given on Day 0 and Day 1) and a single dose of Rituximab (375mg/m2) on Day 0, given intra-operative. Subjects will take maintenance doses of prednisone and enteric coated mycophenolate sodium (Myforticâ„¢). Subject will also be given cyclosporine (Neoral®) therapy for approximately 2 weeks (10-20 days).
To evaluate the benefit of rituximab in patients with CAN with histologically proven C4d deposits and/or plasma cell and/or B-Lymphocyte (CD20+ cells) infiltration of their grafts.
Calcineurin inhibitors (CNI), a potent immunosuppressive drug used in kidney transplant recipients to prevent graft rejection, may cause renal impairment. The aim of this study is to assess whether a CNI-free regimen with enteric-coated mycophenolate sodium and everolimus is as safe and well tolerated as a standard regimen consisting of enteric-coated mycophenolate sodium and cyclosporine microemulsion without a compromise in therapeutic efficacy while resulting in an improved renal function.
The purpose of this study is to obtain data on the effectiveness and safety of Rapamune under everyday conditions
Cardiovascular disease after renal transplantation is an important problem. Patients after renal transplantation with low LDL-Levels (<130mg/dl) receive Fluvastatin 80mg/day (or no medication, to look for the cardiovascular outcome with and without statins.