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A Study to Evaluate Renal Fibrosis Using MRI Techniques

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Renovascular
Hypertension
Interventions
Device: qMT-MRI to detect fibrosis.
Registration Number
NCT04508049
Lead Sponsor
Mayo Clinic
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether or not an MRI technique (quantitative magnetization transfer or qMT) in narrowing human kidneys is feasible, reproducible, and predicts recovery.

Detailed Description

Renal fibrosis is a final pathway and important biomarker of injury common to most forms of kidney disease. For example, in renal vascular disease (RVD) progressive renal fibrosis may induce kidney injury and hypertension. Early identification of fibrosis and adequate intervention may slow down renal disease progression, but adequate noninvasive strategies to detect and quantify renal fibrosis are yet to be identified.

Magnetization transfer imaging (MTI) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a novel noninvasive method to evaluate the tissue macromolecular composition. The investigators have demonstrated that MTI can assess stenotic kidney fibrosis in murine and swine models of unilateral RVD. However, the clinical utility of MT-MRI to assess renal fibrosis is currently limited, because it is inherently semi-quantitative. In contrast, quantitative MT (qMT), based on biophysical compartment models, provides more objective measurement of tissue MT properties. A model fitting of MR signal acquired with various MT pulse amplitudes and offset frequencies, combined with scan-specific B0/B1/T1 maps, give rise to a more complete definition of tissue parameters, including a "bound pool fraction", a direct measure of the macromolecular content in tissue.

The hypothesis underlying this proposal is that qMT would reliably detect development of renal fibrosis at both 1.5 T and 3.0 T in subjects with RVD. To test this hypothesis, which is supported by strong preliminary data, the investigators will initially develop, optimize, and validate qMT for evaluation of fibrosis in the post-stenotic swine kidney. The investigators will correlate qMT-derived renal fibrosis with reference standards, as well as with single-kidney hemodynamics, function, and oxygenation, quantified using cutting-edge multi-detector CT (MDCT) and MRI techniques. The investigators will then determine the ability of qMT to predict renal recovery in pigs with RVD undergoing revascularization. Further, they will perform a pilot study to test the ability of qMT to quantify fibrosis in the post-stenotic human kidney, in comparison to innovative biomarkers of renal dysfunction and tissue damage.

Three specific aims will test the hypotheses: Specific Aim 1: qMT in stenotic swine kidneys is feasible, reliable, and reproducible at 1.5 and 3.0 T. Specific Aim 2: qMT predicts renal recovery potential in response to percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty (PTRA). Specific Aim 3: qMT in stenotic human kidneys is feasible, reproducible, and predicts recovery.

The proposed studies may therefore establish a reliable, noninvasive, and clinically feasible strategy to quantify kidney fibrosis, a key biomarker for renal outcomes and therapeutic success.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
27
Inclusion Criteria
  • Between ages 40 and 80 years old.
  • Patients with hypertension (BP>140/90 mmHg) and/or requirement for two or more antihypertensive medications for more than 4 weeks.
  • Serum creatinine under 2.2 and 2.0 mg/dL for men and women, respectively (Caucasians). Values for African-American subjects are slightly higher (2.4 mg/dL, males; 2.1 mg/dL females).
  • No contraindications to angiography: severe contrast allergy.
  • No contraindications to no-contrast MR evaluations: e.g. pacemaker or magnetically active metal fragments, claustrophobia.
  • Patients have the ability to comply with protocol
  • Patients are competent and able to provide written informed consent
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Exclusion Criteria
  • Patient has serum creatinine >2.2 mg/dL for men and >2.0 mg/dL for women (Caucasians); >2.4 mg/dL for men and >2.1 mg/dL for women (African American).
  • RVD in a solitary kidney
  • Patients have clinically significant medical conditions within the prior six months: e.g. myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, stroke, that would, in the opinion of the investigators, compromise the safety of the patient.
  • Uncontrolled hypertension (Systolic BP >180 mmHg despite therapy).
  • Diabetes requiring insulin or oral hypoglycemic medications.
  • Evidence of hepatitis B or C, or HIV infection.
  • Requirement for potentially nephrotoxic drugs; e.g., non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
  • Cardiac ejection fraction less than 30%.
  • History of deep venous thrombosis within 3 months of enrollment.
  • Kidney transplant.
  • Pacemaker, implantable defibrillator or other contraindication to MRI
  • Inability to comply with breath-hold for 20 seconds
  • Any active malignancy and undergoing therapy
  • Patients are pregnant.
  • Kidney or ureteric stone
  • Another known acute or chronic kidney disease
  • Federal medical center inmates.
  • Latex allergy
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Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Early identification of fibrosis.qMT-MRI to detect fibrosis.A pilot study to test the ability of qMT to quantify fibrosis in the post-stenotic human kidney, in comparison to innovative biomarkers of renal dysfunction and tissue damage. We will pursue the Specific Aim that qMT in stenotic human kidneys is feasible and reproducible.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Fibrosis assessed by qMT-MRI in the stenotic kidney and contralateral kidneysBaseline

A significant difference in qMT bound pool fraction (f, %) in the stenotic compared to the contralateral kidney in RVD patients.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Fibrosis assessed by qMT-MRI compared to stenotic kidney functionBaseline

A significant correlation between qMT bound pool fraction (f, %) with function (SK-GFR) and oxygenation (SK-R2\*) in the stenotic kidney.

Fibrosis assessed by qMT-MRI compared to stenotic kidney injury markersBaseline

A significant correlation between qMT bound pool fraction (f, %) with levels of renal injury markers: Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL), kidney injury molecular (KIM)-1, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)\], as well as urinary levels of extracellular vehicles (EVs) (measured by flow cytometry, %) originating from renal microvessels.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Mayo Clinic in Rochester

🇺🇸

Rochester, Minnesota, United States

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