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Tacrolimus C:D Ratio Measured in Renal Transplant Recipients Treated With Once-daily Prolonged-release Drugs

Phase 4
Recruiting
Conditions
Immunosuppression
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT06268769
Lead Sponsor
Edward Geissler
Brief Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to compare the bioavailability and practicability of two different formulations of tacrolimus in kidney transplant recipients. The main objective is to demonstrate that Envarsus® (test drug) has superior (higher) oral bioavailability compared with Advagraf™ (comparator drug) at 12 weeks after kidney transplantation. The trial also aims to compare the practicability (handling) of the two drugs using a series of pharmacokinetic parameters and to explore the relationship between drug bioavailability and long-term clinical outcomes, with a special focus on dose-dependent adverse reactions, measured until 3 years post-transplantation. The trial incorporates a pharmacokinetic sub-study designed to profile the peak tacrolimus blood concentration up to 6 hours after drug intake on the day of the 12-week study visit.

Detailed Description

This clinical trial aims to compare the bioavailability and practicability of two alternative once-daily formulations of tacrolimus in patients who have received either a first or second kidney transplant and require prophylactic immunosuppressive treatment to prevent allograft rejection. Trial participants are randomised within 7 days prior to kidney transplantation surgery in a 1:1 ratio to two alternative treatment arms containing either Envarsus (test arm) or Advagraf (comparator arm) as first-line calcineurin inhibitor within a standard-of-care immunosuppressive regimen. Tacrolimus blood trough levels and drug doses are monitored at regular intervals to measure a dose-normalised trough level (concentration/dose, C/D ratio) as an estimate of tacrolimus bioavailability.

The primary objective is to demonstrate that the C/D ratio of tacrolimus measured in kidney transplant recipients treated with Envarsus® (test drug) is superior to (higher than) the C/D ratio measured in patients treated with Advagraf™ (comparator drug) at 12 weeks post-transplantation. The trial also aims to compare the practicability (handling) of these two once-daily drug formulations using a series of pharmacokinetic parameters that will measure the speed with which therapeutic blood trough levels are attained and the ease with which stable blood trough levels are maintained over time.

Secondarily, TaC:Drop aims to explore the relationship between the early C/D ratio measured at 12 weeks post-transplantation and later clinical outcomes measured until three years post-transplantation. The study aims to investigate whether a superior pharmacokinetic drug profile is associated with fewer and milder dose-dependent drug toxicities and superior kidney graft function, as measured by long-term safety and efficacy parameters.

Drug pharmacokinetics will be explored in greater detail during a sub-study designed to profile the peak blood concentration of Envarsus® and Advagraf™ at 12 weeks post-transplantation in patients who volunteer to provide three additional blood samples at two-hour intervals after drug intake on the day of the 12-week trial visit. Participation in this sub-study is voluntary and available to all trial centres and all trial patients.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
300
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Signed and dated written informed consent
  2. Adult (≥18 years old) male or female
  3. Renal insufficiency necessitating kidney transplantation and approved to receive a first or second kidney allograft from a living or deceased organ donor
  4. ABO blood type compatible with the donor kidney
  5. Able to swallow an oral formulation of tacrolimus in tablet or capsule form
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Multi-organ transplantation
  2. Any previous solid organ transplantation (other than a first kidney allograft)
  3. For recipients of a second kidney transplant: loss of first kidney transplant within 2 years after transplantation owing to immunological reasons or recurrence of the underlying renal disease
  4. Patient and/or donor is positive for HCV, HBV or HIV
  5. History of any malignancy that could not be curatively treated
  6. Ongoing abuse of drugs or alcohol
  7. Signs of advanced liver disease or any signs of liver decompensation
  8. Ongoing uncontrolled systemic infection
  9. Severe diarrhoea, vomiting, active peptic ulcer, previous bariatric surgery, or any other gastrointestinal disorder that may affect absorption of tacrolimus
  10. Planned or foreseeable use of cyclosporine, belatacept or any tacrolimus preparation other than Envarsus® or Advagraf™
  11. Known contraindication or hypersensitivity to tacrolimus, and/or to any of the excipients listed in section 6.1 of the Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) of both Envarsus® and Advagraf™, and/or to any other macrolides
  12. Pregnant or nursing (lactating) women, where pregnancy is defined as the state of a female after conception and until the termination of gestation, confirmed by a positive hCG laboratory test
  13. Women of child-bearing potential (WOCBP), defined as all women physiologically capable of becoming pregnant, unless using a highly-effective method of contraception
  14. Participation in another interventional clinical trial in the time period starting from 4 weeks prior to randomisation and throughout the entire trial period
  15. Any condition or factor which, in the judgement of the investigator, would place the subject at undue risk, invalidate communication with the investigator or study team, or hamper compliance with the trial protocol or follow-up schedule
  16. Inability to freely give informed consent (e.g. individuals under legal guardianship)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
AdvagrafTacrolimus capsuleParticipants take prolonged-release tacrolimus capsules (Advagraf) orally once daily and additionally receive standard-of-care immunosuppressive background therapy according to routine practice.
EnvarsusTacrolimus PillParticipants take prolonged-release tacrolimus tablets (Envarsus) orally once daily and additionally receive standard-of-care immunosuppressive background therapy according to routine practice.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Dose-normalised blood trough level of tacrolimus (concentration/dose ratio)12 weeks after kidney transplantation

To calculate C/D ratio, "concentration" is the blood trough level of tacrolimus measured in a blood sample collected immediately prior to drug dosing on the day of the 12-week trial visit and "dose" is the daily dose taken by the patient on the day prior to the visit. C/D ratio is measured as a surrogate for tacrolimus bioavailability (i.e. systemic exposure per mg of drug). The primary endpoint uses a blood trough level reading that is measured in a central laboratory.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Proportion of patients with trough levels lower, within, or higher than the target range4 days, 14 days, 28 days and 12 weeks after kidney transplantation
Treatment failure rate12 weeks and 1, 2, 3 years after kidney transplantation

A composite endpoint of biopsy-proven acute rejection, graft failure (defined as initiation of renal dialysis or re-transplantation), or death (from any cause)

Time to reach the first trough level in target rangeTime period measured in days, assessed within the first 2 weeks after kidney transplantation

Reaching the target range is defined as two consecutive readings within the initial target range of 5-12 ng/ml; time is measured to the date of the first in-range reading

Mean daily dose of tacrolimus and inter-patient variability (range) of tacrolimus daily dose4 days, 14 days, 28 days and 12 weeks after kidney transplantation
Incidence rate of graft failure12 weeks and 1, 2, 3 years after kidney transplantation

Graft failure is defined as initiation of renal dialysis or pre-emptive re-transplantation

Graft function measured by eGFR (estimated glomerular filtration rate)4 days, 14 days, 28 days, 12 weeks and 1, 2, 3 years after kidney transplantation

eGFR calculated according to the CKD-EPI formula

Incidence rate of for-cause biopsies12 weeks after kidney transplantation
Mean tacrolimus trough level and inter-patient variability (range) of tacrolimus trough levels4 days, 14 days, 28 days and 12 weeks after kidney transplantation
Tacrolimus concentration/dose (C/D) ratio4 days, 14 days, 28 days and 1, 2, 3 years after kidney transplantation

The secondary endpoint using C/D ratio data takes a blood trough level reading that is measured in the local laboratory at the trial site.

Intra-patient variability of C/D ratio and daily doseMeasured over the time points: day 4, day 14, day 28 and week 12
Time to treatment failure after transplantationMeasured until 3 years after kidney transplantation

Treatment failure is a composite endpoint of biopsy-proven acute rejection, graft failure (defined as initiation of renal dialysis or pre-emptive re-transplantation), or death (from any cause)

Incidence rate, severity and time to clinically-confirmed biopsy-proven acute rejection12 weeks and 1, 2, 3 years after kidney transplantation

Clinically-confirmed biopsy-proven acute rejection requires both a clinical diagnosis of rejection by an investigator and a histopathological diagnosis of rejection in a for-cause biopsy. Subclinical rejection diagnosed in a protocol biopsy is therefore excluded from this definition.

Mortality rate12 weeks and 1, 2, 3 years after kidney transplantation

Mortality rate measures death from any cause

Incidence rate of acute rejection episodes requiring treatment12 weeks after kidney transplantation
Incidence of hepatotoxicity12 weeks and 1, 2, 3 years after kidney transplantation

Hepatotoxicity is defined as GPT or GOT levels ≥ 2.5 x upper limit of normal range

Blood pressure12 weeks and 1, 2, 3 years after kidney transplantation
Incidence rate of primary non-function of the renal allograftMeasurable within the first 12 weeks after kidney transplantation

Primary non-function is defined as the necessity for ongoing chronic dialysis

Recurrence of primary kidney disease12 weeks and 3 years after kidney transplantation
Incidence of de novo DSADetected within the first year after kidney transplantation
Patient-reported health-related quality-of-life measured using the Kidney Transplant Questionnaire-34 (KTQ-34)12 weeks and 3 years after kidney transplantation

The KTQ-34 is a renal transplantation-specific instrument that measures quality-of-life in five dimensions. It is a self-administered questionnaire that is completed in writing by the trial patients.

Incidence rate of steroid-resistant episodes of biopsy-proven acute rejection12 weeks and 1 year after kidney transplantation
Incidence of CMV and BKV infection (including organ manifestation, if relevant)12 weeks and 1 year after kidney transplantation
Incidence of de novo tremor12 weeks and 3 years after kidney transplantation

Incidence and severity of tremor based on medical assessment by the investigator

Incidence rate of delayed graft functionMeasurable within the first 2 weeks after kidney transplantation

Delayed graft function is defined as the need for more than one episode of dialysis after transplantation

Incidence, type, severity and seriousness of adverse reactions (ARs)12 weeks and 3 years after kidney transplantation
Incidence of gastrointestinal disorders requiring diagnostic investigation12 weeks and 3 years after kidney transplantation
Incidence of new onset diabetes mellitus after transplantation (NODAT)12 weeks and 1, 2, 3 years after kidney transplantation

NODAT is defined as HbA1c ≥ 6.5% or 47.5 mmol/mol or fasting plasma glucose ≥ 126 mg/dl on two separate occasions

Doses and duration of glucocorticosteroid treatment12 weeks and 1, 2, 3 years after kidney transplantation
Dose of mycophenolate12 weeks and 1, 2, 3 years after kidney transplantation

Including both mycophenolate mofetil and mycophenolic acid

Incidence and time to study treatment discontinuation3 years after kidney transplantation
Incidence, time to and reason for patient withdrawal from study3 years after kidney transplantation

Trial Locations

Locations (9)

University Hospital Dresden, Division of Nephrology

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Dresden, Germany

University Hospital Aachen, Department of General, Visceral and Transplant Surgery

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Aachen, Germany

University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Internal Medicine III (Nephrology, Rheumatology, Endocrinology)

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Hamburg, Germany

University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Medical Clinic I. (Nephrology)

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Mainz, Germany

Hannover Medical School, Department of General, Visceral and Transplant Surgery

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Hannover, Germany

University Hospital Münster, Medical Clinic D

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Münster, Germany

Charité Universitätsmedizin, Department of Nephrology and Medical Intensive Care

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Berlin, Germany

University Hospital Regensburg, Department of Nephrology

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Regensburg, Germany

University Hospital Jena, Internal Medicine III, Nephrology

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Jena, Germany

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