Study of Liver Transplant For End-Stage Liver Disease Caused By Chronic Hepatitis C Infection
- Conditions
- Hepatitis CEnd Stage Liver Disease
- Interventions
- Registration Number
- NCT00163657
- Lead Sponsor
- Baylor Research Institute
- Brief Summary
The purpose of this study is to compare three treatment regimens in patients who have received a liver transplant for end-stage liver disease caused by Chronic Hepatitis C infection.
- Detailed Description
End-stage liver disease due to Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is the most common reason for liver transplantation in the United States. Patients who have HCV will always carry the virus in their body. If patients respond to treatment, the virus is no longer active. This means that although the virus is still present, it is not currently causing damage to their liver.
Because recurrence of HCV is virtually universal in HCV positive transplant recipients and is associated with long term, possibly lethal complications, the search for the most appropriate therapies must also include methods to prevent or minimize recurrence or disease progression, if the goal of improving long term outcomes for these patients is to be achieved.
Corticosteroids and high doses of immunosuppressive agents have been associated with increased rates of HCV recurrence. Finding a regimen that provides adequate immunosuppression to prevent early and late rejection episodes, and minimizes steroid usage as well as high doses of other immunosuppressive agents is highly desirable.
This study is being conducted to determine the most effective immunosuppressive regimen that will prevent allograft rejection, minimize adverse events and at the same time, prevent or reduce the incidence of HCV recurrence following liver transplant.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 312
- Patient has been fully informed and has signed an IRB approved informed consent form and is willing and able to follow study procedures for the full 2 years.
- Patient is a recipient of a primary whole/split, cadaveric/living donor liver transplant for end stage chronic Hepatitis C.
- Patient is > age 18.
- Female patients of child bearing potential must have a negative urine or serum pregnancy test upon hospitalization or within 7 days prior to enrollment and have agreed to utilize effective birth control throughout the study as well as for 6 weeks following study completion.
- Patient has previously received or is receiving an organ transplant other than a liver.
- Patient has received a liver transplant from a Hepatitis B core antibody or a Hepatitis C antibody positive donor.
- Patient has received an ABO (blood group anti A, anti B antibodies) incompatible donor liver.
- Patient has fulminant liver failure with a life expectancy without a liver transplant of less than 7 days as defined by UNOS (Adult Patient Status 1, UNOS Policy 3.6.4.1: See Appendix C).
- Patient has renal dysfunction pre-transplant that, in the opinion of the investigator, will prohibit the use of calcineurin inhibitors within 72 hours post transplant.
- Patient is intubated, on vasopressors, is ICU bound, or has experienced a significant blood loss (greater than 5 units) 72 hours prior to transplant procedure.
- Recipient or donor is seropositive for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or HbsAg positive serology.
- Patient is to receive antilymphocyte antibody induction therapy, such as ATGAM (lymphocyte immune globulin), OKT3 (muromonab-CD3), Simulect (basiliximab), or Thymoglobulin.
- Patient has a known hypersensitivity to Prograf (TAC), HCO-60, CellCept (MMF), Zenapax or corticosteroids.
- Patient is pregnant or lactating.
- Patient has participated in a blinded trial or participated in a trial involving a non-marketed (investigational) drug within 3 months of enrollment.
- Patient has participated in a trial involving a market drug within 30 days. However, patients who participated in any interferon or ribavirin trials are permitted.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description daclizumub, MMFand tacrolimus MMF immunosuppressant treatment regimens tacrolimus and cyclosporine Tacrolimus immunosuppressant treatment regimens the intervention is antirejection treatment with the above labeled drugs tacrolimus and cyclosporine daclizumub, MMFand tacrolimus Tacrolimus immunosuppressant treatment regimens MMF, tacrolimus and cyclosporine Tacrolimus immunosuppressant treatment regimensthe intervention is antirejection treatment with the above labeled drugs MMF tacrolimus and cyclosporine tacrolimus and cyclosporine Daclizumub immunosuppressant treatment regimens the intervention is antirejection treatment with the above labeled drugs tacrolimus and cyclosporine MMF, tacrolimus and cyclosporine Cyclosporine immunosuppressant treatment regimensthe intervention is antirejection treatment with the above labeled drugs MMF tacrolimus and cyclosporine MMF, tacrolimus and cyclosporine MMF immunosuppressant treatment regimensthe intervention is antirejection treatment with the above labeled drugs MMF tacrolimus and cyclosporine daclizumub, MMFand tacrolimus Daclizumub immunosuppressant treatment regimens
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Freedom From Acute Rejection or HCV Recurrence or Treatment Failure 12 months Freedom from acute rejection (Banff\>grade 2 with RAI score\>4) or freedom from HCV recurrence (Batts/Ludwig\>Stage 2, or \>Grade 3) that requires HCV antiviral therapy or treatment failure (patient death, graft loss, premature withdrawal from study regimen or treatment with more than 1 dose of corticosteroids for presumptive rejection without a biopsy to confirm the rejection; reported values represent the "Number of participants with Freedom From Acute Rejection or HCV Recurrence or Treatment Failure"
Freedom From HCV Recurrence Within First Year That Requires HCV Antiviral Therapy and Freedom From Treatment Failure 12 month post transplant Participants would have their blood drawn and tested for the HCV virus to determine if they had recurrence
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Baylor Regional Transplant Institute - Baylor University Medical Center
🇺🇸Dallas, Texas, United States