Infusion of T-Regulatory Cells in Kidney Transplant Recipients (The ONE Study)
- Conditions
- Kidney Failure, Kidney Transplant
- Registration Number
- NCT02091232
- Lead Sponsor
- Massachusetts General Hospital
- Brief Summary
This research study is for patients who are going to receive a kidney transplant from a living donor. After kidney transplantation, it is necessary for transplant recipients to take "immunosuppressive drugs". These drugs work by preventing the body's immune cells from attacking and "rejecting" the new kidney. Taking these drugs long-term may also cause harm to the transplanted kidney. Therefore, the transplant community is very interested in finding ways to decrease immunosuppressive drug treatment and further reduce the risk of kidney rejection. One method to do so is known as "induction of tolerance", which is when the person who receives a transplant has treatment to make their immune cells tolerant to the donor cells.
In this study, we will try to induce tolerance by mixing recipient cells and their donor's cells together with belatacept, an immunosuppressive drug. Belatacept is a protein that attaches to immune system cells, interferes with the immune response and results in tolerance induction.
After we mix the recipient cells with the donor's cells, we will sort out one particular kind of immune cell, called a regulatory T cell, and inject them back into the recipient. Regulatory T cells are the cells that are affected by induction to reduce rejection of donated organs. This method for inducing tolerance has been used in bone marrow transplantation, but this is the first time it is being done in kidney transplantation.
This study is being conducted as part of a unique collaboration of US and EU centers called The ONE Study. The ONE Study centers have agreed to work together using common protocols and procedures but with each testing their own regulatory population for safety and the ability to promote kidney survival. Sharing data among the participating sites will permit a deeper understanding of how and why some treatments might succeed while others work less well.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 4
- Chronic renal insufficiency necessitating kidney transplantation
- Aged at least 18 years
- Donor is ABO (Blood type) compatible
Key Recipient
- HIV positive, EBV negative, or suffering from chronic viral hepatitis or tuberculosis
- Previously received any tissue or organ transplant other than planned kidney graft
- Genetically identical to the prospective organ donor at the HLA loci (0-0-0 mismatch)
- Panel Reactive Antibodies (PRA) >20%
- Concomitant malignancy or history of malignancy within 5 years prior to planned study entry (excluding successfully-treated non metastatic basal/squamous cell carcinoma of the skin)
- Ongoing treatment with systemic immunosuppressive drugs at study entry
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Safety and Feasibility of T Regulatory Cell Infusion in Renal Transplantation 2 Weeks To examine in living donor renal transplant recipients the safety and feasibility of administering T regulatory cells derived from recipient PBMC stimulated with kidney donor PBMC in the presence of costimulatory blockade with belatacept.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Reduction of Immunosuppression 60 Weeks To develop preliminary information on whether administration of the Treg cell product allows a tapering of conventional maintenance immunosuppression within 60 weeks after transplantation.
T-Reg Measurements 2 Years To measure the presence, potency, and specificity of Treg in the peripheral circulation of kidney transplant recipients.
This will be done by in-vitro testing of the T-reg cell product and peripheral blood.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Massachusetts General Hospital
🇺🇸Boston, Massachusetts, United States