A Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial of Thymoglobulin® After Liver Transplantation
- Registration Number
- NCT02544113
- Lead Sponsor
- The Cleveland Clinic
- Brief Summary
This is a 24-month, Phase II, multi-center, two-arm, randomized controlled study of adult patients receiving a single organ liver transplant from a deceased donor; the purpose being to determine the efficacy of Thymoglobulin® induction and delayed initiation of CNI in the long-term preservation of renal function after liver transplantation. This study is based on the outcomes of an earlier phase 1 pilot study which was performed at the Cleveland Clinic.
This study will be conducted at 3 centers, with 110 subjects randomized 1:1 into two groups: Group 1 will receive Thymoglobulin® induction, (4.5 mg/Kg, in 3 doses of 1.5 mg/Kg/dose) with delayed initiation of CNI to begin on Day 10 post LT. Group 2 will receive early CNI initiation (to be started no later than Day 2 post LT), and no Thymoglobulin® induction (or any other antibody).
All subjects will also receive a maintenance immunosuppressive regimen consisting of corticosteroids and mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) according to standard of practice in orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT).
Subjects will be consented pre-transplant. Participation may last up to 12 months post OLT. There are 15 study-related visits which will be completed during standard of care (SOC) visits.
- Detailed Description
Functional recovery of renal function from acute renal failure occurs in 75% of patients at approximately 14 days after onset of the disease. In liver transplantation, intraoperative hemodynamic insults typically lead to acute renal failure which may be further worsened by exposure to CNI therapy in the early postoperative period. In practice, patients who demonstrate early evidence of acute renal failure often have their CNI therapy delayed for 4-5 days. This duration of CNI delay is too short to have any salutary effect on the course or severity of acute kidney injury as less than 20% of patients experience any functional recovery by day 5.
Thymoglobulin® (Sanofi, Cambridge, MA) is a polyclonal immunosuppressive agent that is derived from rabbits immunized with pediatric thymocytes. It contains antibodies to a wide variety of T-cell antigens and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens and is approved for the treatment of kidney rejection by the FDA. Thymoglobulin® has been shown to be a safe and efficacious induction therapy that permits delayed exposure to CNI therapy while preventing the occurrence of acute rejection in kidney transplantation. The investigators hypothesize that any perioperative insult leading to AKI in OLT recipients is unlikely to be beneficially impacted by a short delay of CNI introduction. Further hypothesized is that avoidance of CNI for 10 days will have a beneficial effect on the course and severity of perioperative AKI. Since perioperative AKI is a potent risk factor for chronic kidney disease (CKD) in the late post-transplant period, also hypothesized is that minimizing the risk and severity of AKI with prolonged delayed exposure to CNI will have a beneficial effect on renal function late after liver transplantation.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 110
- Patients undergoing deceased donor solitary liver transplantation
- Age 18-75 years at the time of transplantation
- Willingness and ability to comply with the study procedures
- Signed informed consent form
- For patients with Hepatocellular carcinoma as indication for OLT, (must be within the Milan Criteria)
- Hepatitis C, positive or negative, patients
- Prior kidney transplantation
- Congenital or iatrogenic absence of one kidney
- Subjects on renal replacement therapy at the time of OLT
- MELD score >34
- HIV positive patient
- Patient with current severe systemic infection
- History of bacterial peritonitis within 30 days prior to OLT
- Active infection or recent infection within 30 days prior to OLT
- Use of a calcineurin inhibitor continuously for more than 90 days within the past 6 months
- History of hypersensitivity to Thymoglobulin®, rabbits or tacrolimus
- Pregnant and/or nursing (lactating) females.
- Women of childbearing age who are unwilling to use effective contraception during the duration of the study, and for 30 days after study participation and/or last dose of Study Drug.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Control Placebo Subjects randomized to the (Early CNI) group (Control group) will receive no antibody therapy for induction and will start CNI therapy on postoperative (post-transplant) Day 2. Subjects will also receive a maintenance immunosuppression regimen of corticosteroids and MMF in accordance with the standard practice at each clinical center. Thymo Thymoglobulin Subjects randomized to the (Delay CNI) group will be treated with Thymoglobulin® (total dose of 4.5 mg/kg) administered in three doses; (each dose being 1.5 mg/kg - administered Day 0 \[after transplant\], Day 2, and Day 4 post transplant), along with CNI delay for 10 days. CNI will be initiated on postoperative (post-transplant) Day 10. Subjects will also receive a maintenance immunosuppression regimen of corticosteroids and MMF in accordance with the standard practice at each clinical center.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method The Incidence of Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) as Assessed by Change in Serum Creatinine From Baseline to 30 Days Post-transplant 30 days post-transplant Change in serum creatinine from baseline to 30 days post-transplant. Higher values are associated with worse outcomes, and values greater than 0.3 mg/dL are suggestive of acute kidney injury.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Number of Participants Experiencing Acute Cellular Rejection 30 days post OLT The number of participants experiencing acute cellular rejection, as determined by biopsy.
Graft Survival 6 months post OLT Number of participants who did not require retransplantation
Trial Locations
- Locations (4)
Cleveland Clinic (Main Campus)
🇺🇸Cleveland, Ohio, United States
University of Cincinnati College of Medicine
🇺🇸Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Cleveland Clinic Florida
🇺🇸Weston, Florida, United States
Medical College of Wisconsin
🇺🇸Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States