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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03150147
Other study ID # 2016/603
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date March 1, 2017
Est. completion date June 30, 2020

Study information

Verified date April 2021
Source Region Skane
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The overall aim of this proposal is to compare a new state-of-the-art ex-vivo organ preservation method with standard ischemic cold static storage of donor hearts in adult cardiac transplantation. Standard heart preservation before transplantation consists of cold ischemic storage of the heart. Clinical studies has shown that the morbidity and mortality risk increases with extension of the allograft ischemic time over four hours. For each additional hour the mortality risk increase with 25% the first year. This time constrained is costly and results in severe logistical problems, leading to loss of transplantable organs. Initially the study is prospective, single-institution, open-label, non-randomised trial comparing the NIHP method with the conventionally SCS in adult heart transplanted patients at Skane University Hospital, Lund, Sweden. Six patients will be transplanted using the non-ischemic hypothermic cardioplegic perfusion. These will be compared with contemporary control patients transplanted with standard ischemic cold static storage. The results will be analysed and reported. After the initially six patients have been completed, the study will become a single center, prospective, open, blinded endpoint, randomized, controlled clinical trial including 34 patients. The primary end-point is a composite of mortality, primary graft dysfunction (PGD), need for extra corporal support, or acute cellular rejection (ACR) within 30- days post-transplant. PGD and ACR will be accessed blinded.An improved preservation of the transplanted organ will reduce the major limitations for survival in the early post-transplant period such as non-specific graft failure and acute rejection. Furthermore, it will make it possible to increase the donor pool.


Description:

SURVEY OF THE FIELD Ischemia and reperfusion (I/R)-elicited tissue injury contributes to morbidity and mortality4. In organ transplantation, it is a major challenge. The imbalance in metabolic supply and demand within the ischemic organ results in tissue hypoxia and microvascular dysfunction4. The following reperfusion enhances the activation of innate and adaptive immune responses resulting in a cell death programs4,5. Furthermore, it has been report that miRNA expression profile for heart transplantation is associated with I/R injury. Standard heart preservation before transplantation consists of cold ischemic storage of the heart. Clinical studies have shown that the mortality risk increases sharply with extension of the allograft ischemic time over 4 hours. For each additional hour, the mortality risk increase with 25% the first year. Different myocardial cardioplegic preservation solutions and an ex-vivo perfusion machine have been developed. That technique includes use of whole blood from deceased donor and a normothermic beating heart consuming nutrients during the preservation. Despite some promising experimental results, no consistent differences in outcome have been found. Improved preservation of the endothelium of the coronary arteries is instrumental to achieve improved patient short and long term outcome. A damaged endothelium could result in cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV) and increases the risk of ACR. Therefore, prolonged time and improved storage of the donor heart would save lives. PURPOSE AND AIM The overall aim of this study is to compare a new state-of-the-art organ preservation technique, non-ischemic continous/intermittent hypothermic cardioplegic perfusion (NICHCP), on immediate and long term heart allograft function and rejection episodes, with standard ischemic cold static storage (ICSS) of donor hearts in adult cardiac transplantation. A new ex-vivo heart perfusion technique where the heart is perfused during explantation, using an independent portable heart-lung-machine, has been developed by Prof. Steen's research group3. Pre-clinical studies have shown that the new technology using NICHCP of donor hearts can be safely applied for 24 hours in pigs, however this new perfusion technique has never been used on man. The primary hypothesis is that the NICHCP is superior to ischemic cold static storage of donor hearts. The primary end-point is a composite of mortality, primary graft dysfunction, need for extra corporal mechanical support, or Acute Cellular Rejection (ACR) ≥ grade 2 within 30-days. RESEARCH QUESTION The study will investigate the superiority of the new methodology (NICHCP) in terms of improved immediate and prolonged organ function. More specifically, it is hypothesized that the weaning period of cardio-pulmonary bypass, will be shorter, the need for inotropic support reduced, and the major limitations for survival in the early post-transplant period such as non-specific graft failure, multiorgan failure, ACR, and infection will decrease. Furthermore, in the late post-transplant period, it is hypothesized that the development of CAV and immunosuppressive side effects, such as malignancy, will be reduced. WORK PLAN In the initial phase, it is excepted that 1 - 2 patients will be enrolled per month. During the randomized part of the study It is expected to enroll 1 - 4 patients per month. With that pace, the study is completed within about 24 months. The patient short term follow-up is 30 days and long term follow up is 12 months. For short-term-analysis purpose the study is considered completed as the last patient of the study has passed 30-days post-surgery. The long-term study will continue to monitor the patients for 12 months. Adverse events will be recorded even if occurring after completion of the study and all patients will be followed throughout life according to standard clinical care. If this is successful, this will be introduced as standard among other national and international collaborators. The investigators estimate that this technique will be the golden standard within 5 years. STUDY DESIGN Initially the study is a prospective, single-institution, open-label, non-randomised trial. Here, six patients will be transplanted with the NICHCP method. These will be compared with contemporary control patients transplanted with standard ICSS. An interim assessment will be performed when these six patients has passed 180-days post-transplant. The results from this study will be analysed and published. A report will be sent to the Ethical review bord for an approval to continue with the second part of the study. After six patients have been transplanted with the NICHCP method and a new approval has been achieved from the local ethical board, the study will become a single center, prospective, open, blinded endpoint, randomized, controlled clinical trial. The continued study will comprise 17 patients in the test group and 17 control patients. The main outcomes will be reported on intention to treat basis. PGD and ACR assessment will be performed by a blinded access. Listed heart recipients (aged >18 years) at Skåne University Hospital will be screened. Patients who full-fill all inclusion and no exclusion criteria will be included after they signed the informed consent form. In the initial phase, it is excepted that 1-2 patients will be enrolled per month. During the randomized part of the study it is expected to enroll 1-4 patients per month. With that pace, the study is completed within 24 months. The patient short term follow-up is 30 days and long term follow up is 12 months. For short-term-analysis purpose the study is considered completed as the last patient of the study has passed 30-days post-surgery. The long-term study will continue to monitor the patients for 12 months. Adverse events will be recorded even if occurring after completion of the study and all patients will be followed throughout life according to standard clinical care. STATISTICAL ANALYS PLAN Descriptive statistics will be presented as means, standard deviations, medians and inter quartile ranges for the continuous variables and as counts and percent for categorical variables. An alpha level of 5% will be used for all analyses, unless otherwise stated. Demographics will be tabulated overall and by treatment group. The results from the laboratory analysis will be calculated based on continuous variables. All data analyses will be performed on data available. After three of the patients have been enrolled a safety assessment will be performed. An interim assessment of the initial six patients in the test group will be performed when all six patients has passed 30-days post-transplant or expired. A protocol deviation is any event where investigator or study personnel did not conduct the study per the protocol or applicable laws. All deviations will be reported to the Principal Investigator (regardless of cause or prior approval) and will be noted on the eCRF form. CLINICAL AND SCIENTIFIC IMPLICATIONS The use of an ex-vivo machine for the preservation of a donor heart requires more resources than the technology used today, such as special equipment, suitable transportation and bank blood to prime the perfusion module. Compared with cold static techniques for preservation, this will initially be costly. However, this must be weighed against the value of more donor hearts become available for transplant and cost savings in the form of shorter time to perform the surgery, reduced incidence of the primary graft dysfunction (PGD), less need for expensive mechanical cardiac support post-transplant, shortened hospitalization and longer-term risk reduction of chronic rejection. The costs of complications directly connected to the transplant is cost driven, especially if the recipient develops PGD requiring mechanical circulatory support with a prolonged ICU stay. Furthermore, in the future the transplantation can be scheduled to day-time surgery and complexed high risk cases can be done with the highest competence available without time limitation. An improved preservation of the transplanted organ will reduce the major limitations for survival in the early post-transplant period such as PGD. Furthermore, it will make it possible to increase the donor pool. Theoretically in the nordic countries, this would enable international organ sharing with Europe and the eastern United States. This expansion of the donor pool is one of the main potential benefits of this device.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 47
Est. completion date June 30, 2020
Est. primary completion date June 30, 2020
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 70 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Age =18 years - Listed for heart transplantation - Signed informed consent form Exclusion Criteria: - Previous solid organ or bone marrow transplantation - 4 or more previous sternotomies - known malignancy - kidney failure (estimated creatinine clearness, GFR <30) - liver failure (ASAT, ALAT or total Bilirubin) > 5 times upper limit of normal, or INR >2.0, - ongoing septicemia - systemic inflammatory disorders treated with corticosteroids - not able to understand Swedish

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Non-ischemic preservation
The device is a portable heart-lung machine; an automatic pressure and flow-controlled perfusion system. The heart is submerged in a solution and the medium is circulated in the heart, at a temperature of 8°C.
Ischemic cold static storage
Standard ischemic cold static storage; a crystalloid solution (cardioplegia) is used to stop and preserve the heart. Cardioplegia is given. The heart is storage i a transport box containing ice to keep the temperature around 8°C.

Locations

Country Name City State
Sweden Skane University Hospital Lund Skane

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Region Skane

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Sweden, 

References & Publications (9)

Ardehali A, Esmailian F, Deng M, Soltesz E, Hsich E, Naka Y, Mancini D, Camacho M, Zucker M, Leprince P, Padera R, Kobashigawa J; PROCEED II trial investigators. Ex-vivo perfusion of donor hearts for human heart transplantation (PROCEED II): a prospective, open-label, multicentre, randomised non-inferiority trial. Lancet. 2015 Jun 27;385(9987):2577-84. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60261-6. Epub 2015 Apr 14. — View Citation

Eltzschig HK, Eckle T. Ischemia and reperfusion--from mechanism to translation. Nat Med. 2011 Nov 7;17(11):1391-401. doi: 10.1038/nm.2507. Review. — View Citation

Jernryd V, Metzsch C, Andersson B, Nilsson J. Organ Preservation and Reperfusion Influence on Outcome after Heart Transplantation. The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation , Volume 35 , Issue 4 , S193

Messer S, Ardehali A, Tsui S. Normothermic donor heart perfusion: current clinical experience and the future. Transpl Int. 2015 Jun;28(6):634-42. doi: 10.1111/tri.12361. Epub 2014 Jul 7. Review. — View Citation

Nilsson J, Jernryd V, Qin G, Paskevicius A, Metzsch C, Sjöberg T, Steen S. A nonrandomized open-label phase 2 trial of nonischemic heart preservation for human heart transplantation. Nat Commun. 2020 Jun 12;11(1):2976. doi: 10.1038/s41467-020-16782-9. — View Citation

Nilsson J, Ohlsson M, Höglund P, Ekmehag B, Koul B, Andersson B. The International Heart Transplant Survival Algorithm (IHTSA): a new model to improve organ sharing and survival. PLoS One. 2015 Mar 11;10(3):e0118644. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0118644. eCollection 2015. — View Citation

Qin G, Sjöberg T, Liao Q, Sun X, Steen S. Intact endothelial and contractile function of coronary artery after 8 hours of heart preservation. Scand Cardiovasc J. 2016 Oct - Dec;50(5-6):362-366. Epub 2016 Aug 3. — View Citation

Steen S, Paskevicius A, Liao Q, Sjöberg T. Safe orthotopic transplantation of hearts harvested 24 hours after brain death and preserved for 24 hours. Scand Cardiovasc J. 2016 Jun;50(3):193-200. doi: 10.3109/14017431.2016.1154598. Epub 2016 Apr 4. — View Citation

Zhou L, Zang G, Zhang G, Wang H, Zhang X, Johnston N, Min W, Luke P, Jevnikar A, Haig A, Zheng X. MicroRNA and mRNA signatures in ischemia reperfusion injury in heart transplantation. PLoS One. 2013 Nov 20;8(11):e79805. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079805. eCollection 2013. Erratum in: PLoS One. 2014;9(6):e101640. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Postoperative renal function The renal function is analyzed based on s-Creatinine levels, need for dialysis (days). Within 30-days post-transplantation
Other Postoperative liver function The liver function is measured with ASAT and ALAT. Within 30-days post-transplantation
Other Length of Stay Intensive Care Unit (ICU): Calculated from time patient arrives into the ICU until the patient is discharged from the ICU. Hospital: Calculated from date and time of surgery until date and time that the patient is discharged from the hospital. Within 12-months post-transplantation
Other EQ-5D The EuroQol (EQ-5D) is an instrument used to assess the current health status of patients. It consists of five domains and one visual analogue scale. This instrument assesses morbidity, self-care, usual activity, pain, and anxiety and depression of patients. The EQ-5D will be completed at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months visits. Within 12-months post-transplantation
Other Immediate Cardiac function - weaning time The immediate organ function is determined as the time for weaning off cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) measured in minutes. Within 2-days post-transplantation
Other Organ graft dysfunction due to rejection Patient death due to graft failure, re-transplantation or sign of graft rejection (ACR = grade 1, AMR =1 or CAV) after transplantation. ACR assessment is based on post-transplant myocardial biopsy information and standard clinical evaluation Within 12-months post-transplantation
Other Organ preservation injury Measure of IL-1, IL-6, TNF, micro-RNAs in tissue samples taken from the donor heart Within 1-days post-transplantation
Other Immediate Cardiac function - inotropic support score Summarize of inotropic support according to the definition in the PGD grading, International Society of Heart and Lung Transplantation guidelines. Within 48-hours post transplantation
Other Respiratory dysfunction Need for re-intubation or time on ventilator > 48 hours Within 7 days post-transplantation
Other Organ rejection Measure of donor specific cell free DNA each month post transplantation Within 12-months post-transplantation
Primary Short-term graft failure The Primary End-Point is defined as a composite endpoint of patient death due to graft failure, re-transplantation due to graft failure, severe primary graft dysfunction (PGD), need for extra corporal mechanical support such as ECMO within 7 days post transplantation, or acute cellular rejection (ACR) = grade 2.
PGD grading is done according to the International Society of Heart and Lung Transplantation guidelines. ACR assessment is based on post-transplant myocardial biopsy information and standard clinical evaluation.
Within 30-days post-transplantation
Secondary Long-term graft failure Secondary End-Points is defined as a time to the composite endpoint defined as: severe primary graft dysfunction (PGD), need for extra corporal mechanical support such as ECMO, acute cellular rejection (ACR) = grade 2, or CAV.
CAV assessment is based on information from the angiography and registered according to the International Society of Heart and Lung Transplantation guidelines guidelines. ACR assessment is based on post-transplant myocardial biopsy information and standard clinical evaluation.
Within 12-months post-transplantation
Secondary Ischemia and reperfusion injury CK-MB are measured from blood samples that are collected from the sinus coronaries after finalized preservation, and from blood-samples 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hours after release of x-clamp. Within 30-days post-transplantation
Secondary Ischemia and reperfusion injury cTnl are measured from blood samples that are collected from the sinus coronaries after finalized preservation, and from blood-samples 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hours after release of x-clamp. Within 30-days post-transplantation
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