MedPath

The ONE Study UK Treg Trial

Phase 1
Completed
Conditions
End-stage Renal Failure
Interventions
Biological: Autologous regulatory T Cell Product
Registration Number
NCT02129881
Lead Sponsor
Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
Brief Summary

A study to assess cell therapy as a treatment to prevent kidney transplant rejection. The trial will involve purification of naturally occurring regulatory T cells (nTregs) from living-donor renal transplant recipients. The cells will then be grown in the laboratory and re-infused into the patient five days after the kidney transplant. This trial is part of an international European Union funded consortium aimed at evaluating cellular immunotherapy in solid organ transplantation (The ONE Study). It is anticipated that immune regulation induced by nTreg therapy can eventually be used to recude the need for conventional immunosuppression in transplant recipients.

Detailed Description

Decades of immunosuppressive drug development has produced an array of powerful pharmacological agents, but the various drawbacks with these treatments leaves considerable room for improvement. By harnessing the power of suppressive mechanisms in the human immune system, regulatory cell therapy may be able to support peripheral tolerance and induce a level of donor-specific unresponsiveness that allows for a reduction in the use of conventional immunosuppression in organ transplant recipients. Several alternative regulatory cell types have been identified as potential adjunct immunotherapies for solid organ transplantation and are now approaching a stage of development that would allow clinical testing in an early-stage trial. The EU-funded international ONE study consortium aims to answer the question as to whether Treg treatment, or other immunoregulatory cell-based therapies, can be advanced in the clinical management of solid organ transplant recipients. This particular Treg trial aims to explored the potential of Treg therapy as an adjunct immunosuppressive treatment in living-donor renal transplant recipients through a clinical protocol design shared by other investigators in the ONE study group testing additional regulatory cell therapies in seperate trials.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
15
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Autologous regulatory T Cell ProductAutologous regulatory T Cell ProductAutologous regulatory T Cell Product (1-10 million cells/kg) infused intravenously 5 days post renal transplantation. Recipients also receive prednisolone, mycophenolate mofetil, and tacrolimus as detailed below: Prednisolone Day 0: 500 mg IV (250mg pre-op, 250mg intra-op) Day 1: 125 mg IV Day 2 to 14: 20.0 mg/day oral Week 3 to 4: 15.0 mg/day oral Week 5 to 8: 10.0 mg/day oral Week 9 to 12: 5.0 mg/day oral Week 13 to 14: 2.5 mg/day oral Week 15 to End: Cessation Mycophenolate Mofetil (MMF) Day -7 to -2: 500 mg/day oral Day -1 to 14: 2000 mg/day oral Week 3 to 36: 1000 mg/day oral Week 37 to 40: 750 mg/day oral Week 41 to 44: 500 mg/day oral Week 45 to 48: 250 mg/day oral Week 49 to End: Cessation Tacrolimus Day -4 to 14: 3-12 ng/ml oral Week 3 to 12: 3-10 ng/ml oral Week 13 to 36: 3-8 ng/ml oral Week 37 to End: 3-6 ng/ml oral
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Incidence of biopsy-confirmed acute rejection.60 weeks
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Incidence of major and/or opportunistic infections60 weeks
Time to first acute rejection episode60 weeks
Incidence of chronic graft dysfunction60 weeks
Severity of acute rejection episodes60 weeks
Incidence of adverse drug reactions60 weeks
Total immunosuppressive burden60 weeks
Incidence of neoplasia.60 weeks
Incidence of graft loss through rejection60 weeks

Trial Locations

Locations (2)

The Oxford Transplant Centre - Churchill Hospital

🇬🇧

Oxford, United Kingdom

Guy's Hospital

🇬🇧

London, United Kingdom

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath