Transplantation Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Organ Transplant Infection Prevention and Detection Project 1.0; Cohort Study of Transplant Recipients at "Ultra-High" Risk for Invasive Fungal Infections
Fungal infections are leading causes of morbidity and mortality in transplant recipients,
yet comprehensive epidemiologic studies in this area are lacking. For this reason, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have provided a grant to the University of
Pittsburgh to study this subject.
The study has four specific aims:
1. To determine the risk of fungal infections in a center where "tolerogenic"
immunosuppressive protocols are currently in place, and to determine whether there are any
measures of immune system function which correlate with risk of fungal infection.
2: To create a repository of serum, urine and bronchoalveolar lavage specimens for the
purpose of determining the effectiveness of novel diagnostic tests for invasive fungal
infections. Such a repository could also be utilized for the purpose of determining the
effectiveness of novel diagnostic tests for viral infections such as West Nile Virus,
cytomegalovirus, HHV-6 and HHV-8.
Specific aim 1 will be investigated by creating a prospective database of solid organ
transplant recipients at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, including demographic
factors as well as subsequent development of infection. The immune function of patients will
be assessed by measuring T cell subsets and assessing T cell function using the Cylex assay.
Specific aim 2 involves collection of serum, urine and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. These
specimens will be stored and later tested at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
in the assessment of novel tests developed for the diagnosis of invasive fungal infections.
This is a longitudinal cohort study. Participation in the research database is limited to
placement of the subjects' identifiable medical information related to their organ
transplantation and immunosuppression use. Participants can consent to allow only medical
information collected and/or provide blood and tissue samples.
Patients seen by the Infectious Disease/Transplant team will be asked to provide their
written informed consent to allow their past, current and future identifiable medical record
information related to their condition placed in the research database. The medical record
information that will be placed in the database will be related directly to the
patients'-participants' disease process. However, since concurrent medical conditions and
treatments (i.e., not related directly to transplantation) may impact substantially the
patients'-participants' condition, it is likely that all of the patients'-participants'
past, current and future identifiable medical record information will be placed in the
research database. Consent will be obtained in the pre-transplant period. The advantage of
this system is that consent is obtained directly from the patient (rather than from a proxy,
as would be necessary in situations where consent is obtained post-transplant). Secondly,
since the timing transplantation can not be predicted with certainty and may occur at hours
during which research coordinators are not working, consent prior to transplantation ensures
that the entire post-transplant period is covered by consent. This would ensure that early
post-transplant infections are not missed, thereby eliminating a form of systematic bias.
The disadvantage of this system is that some patients undergo informed consent who do not
subsequently undergo transplantation. Additionally, occasional patients who present with
acute organ system failure (for example, patients with fulminant hepatic failure) will not
undergo pre-transplant consent. We will attempt to minimize this risk by pre-study and
subsequent meetings with transplant surgeons to ensure the study team is informed about such
patients on a timely basis.
Participant medical information will be stored electronically within the research data base.
The names, social security numbers, and medical record numbers of the participants will be
deleted from their stored medical information and replaced with a linkage code. Access to
participant medical information contained within the research database will be restricted to
the research investigator and research staff..
Information linking the linkage codes to the participants' names, social security numbers
and medical record numbers will be stored in a secure location separate from the medical
information. Access to the information linking the linkage codes with participant names,
social security numbers and medical record numbers will be granted only to the Principal
Investigator and research coordinator of this research database.
Participant medical record information will be stored in the research database for an
indefinite period of time.
The participant will be followed for up to four years after transplantation.
Epidemiologic information to be collected
At baseline (upon signing informed consent), the following information will be collected:
Demographic data - age, sex, state of birth, prior travel to an area endemic for
histoplasmosis, coccidioidomycosis or blastomycosis, indication for listing for
transplantation, other prior medical problems, prior chemotherapy/immunosuppressive
therapies and prior fungal infections.
During the first week post transplant, the following information will be collected: Type and
date of transplant, UNOS status, pre-transplant conditioning with thymoglobulin or
alemtuzumab, ongoing immunosuppressive regimen. At the time of fungal infection, the
following information will be collected - symptoms and signs of infection and their
duration, receipt of antifungal prophylaxis, presence of indwelling vascular devices,
duration of neutropenia, presence of graft versus host disease (GVHD) and its severity and
treatment, history of graft rejection and its treatment
Six weeks following the fungal infection, the following information will be collected -
treatment of the infection, outcome (including duration of hospitalization, fate of organ
graft and mortality)
Blood work to be collected
A separate consent form will be presented for blood work. This is to ensure that the
patients who decline blood work specifically for the study still have the opportunity to
have their epidemiologic information collected. The following tests will be collected
specifically for the study.
- CD4 lymphocyte count pre-transplant and then every three months post-transplant
- Blood for Cylex assay pre-transplant then once per month X18 months
- Blood for storage (see below)* Additionally, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid will be
collected (see below for schedule)
*Blood for storage will be collected on those patients at highest risk for invasive
fungal infections (4, 11, 42, 43). These patients will be:
- Lung transplant recipients
- Intestinal transplant recipients
- Kidney/pancreas transplant recipients
- Liver transplant recipients on renal replacement therapy or requiring
re-transplantation in the first week post-transplantation
The BAL samples will be collected only if the subject undergoes a clinically indicated
bronchoscopy and only the excess BAL fluid will be collected for the study.
Mycologic samples
All fungi grown from routine clinical specimens from patients in the study will be saved by
the clinical microbiology laboratory. They will be made available to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) - other researchers working in conjunction with the CDC may
also examine these isolates for mechanisms of antifungal resistance or mechanisms of
pathogenicity. No patient identifiers would be provided to either the CDC or to other
researchers. Only relevant "de-identified" clinical information (eg, prior use of specific
antifungal agents) would be provided.
;
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