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Clinical Trials/NCT01624077
NCT01624077
Unknown
Phase 1

Phase 1 Clinical Trial Using Regulatory T Cells as Individualized Medicine to Promote Donor-specific Clinical Liver Transplantation Tolerance in Nanjing

Nanjing Medical University1 site in 1 country1 target enrollmentDecember 2014

Overview

Phase
Phase 1
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Chronic Rejection of Liver Transplant
Sponsor
Nanjing Medical University
Enrollment
1
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Patient and graft survival
Last Updated
11 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The first trial will involve the generation of donor alloantigen-specific CD4+CD25+ Tregs from peripheral blood of pre-transplant patients, the administration of the CD4+CD25+ Tregs (1 x 106 cells/kg) at several intervals (for graft specific tolerance induction).

Detailed Description

The first trial will involve the generation of CD4+CD25+CD127- Tregs from peripheral blood of pre-transplant patients, followed by a course (up to 24 months) of tacrolimus (5-10 ng/ml) treatment (to prevent chronic rejection) and the administration of the CD4+CD25+CD127- Tregs (1 x 106 cells/kg) at several intervals (for tolerance induction). The immunesuppress drugs will be gradully withdraw within one year. The number of CD4+CD25+ Tregs needed is based on the assumption that the frequencies of alloreactive CD4+ T cells with direct and indirect allospecificity were 1/104 and 1/105, respectively. The second trial will be carried out in 1-10 year post living donor liver transplantation patients currently under immunosuppressive drug treatment. The investigators will isolate CD4+CD25+CD127- Tregs from these patients, and expand them with mismatched living donor antigens. The patients will be subsequently treated with the expanded donor-antigen specific CD4+CD25+CD127- Tregs (1 x 106 cells/kg) at several intervals, and immunosuppressive drug treatment will be withdrawn. In both clinical trials, the investigators will monitor the number of allospecific Tregs in patients at different time periods, and to test their suppressive functions in vitro. If there will be any signs of graft rejection, patients will be switched back to immunosuppressive drug treatment. The investigators expect that the innovative Tregs immunosuppressive regimen will lead to achieve permanent liver transplantation tolerance without the use of conventional immunosuppressive drugs: the holygrail in clinical transplantation medicine.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
December 2014
End Date
December 2015
Last Updated
11 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Single Group
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Nanjing Medical University
Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Ling Lu

Liver transplantation Center

Nanjing Medical University

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Weight greater than 50kg
  • Will be receiving a living-related primary liver allograft
  • Negative B-cell and T-cell cytotoxic and flow cytometry crossmatch
  • Normal echocardiogram (ECG) with an ejection fraction of greater than 50%
  • Parents willing to comply with the study visits

Exclusion Criteria

  • Current active infection
  • Pregnant or breastfeeding
  • Evidence of HIV infection or known HIV positive serology
  • Antibody positive for hepatitis C virus
  • Surface antigen positive for HBV
  • Recipient or donor is positive for tuberculosis (TB), under treatment for suspected TB, or previously exposed to TB (positive Mantoux test)
  • Current cancer or a history of cancer
  • Uncontrolled concomitant infections, severe diarrhea, vomiting, active upper gastrointestinal tract malabsorption, active peptic ulcer, or any other unstable medical condition that could interfere with this study
  • Currently receiving an investigational drug or received an investigational drug within 30 days prior to transplant
  • Currently receiving any immunosuppressive agent

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Patient and graft survival

Time Frame: one year posttransplantation

Secondary Outcomes

  • Patient and graft survival(3 years post transplantation)
  • Incidence rate of biopsy-proven acute or chronic organ rejection(3 years post transplantation)
  • Incidence of adverse events associated with liver transplantation and immunosuppression(3 years posttransplantation)

Study Sites (1)

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