Protective Immunity Project 01
- Conditions
- ImmunosuppressionImmunityKidney Transplantation
- Registration Number
- NCT00788021
- Lead Sponsor
- Emory University
- Brief Summary
Patients who undergo kidney transplant must take medications to prevent organ rejection. There are standard immunosuppressant medications such as prednisone, tacrolimus (Prograf), mycophenolate mofetil(Cellcept) or sirolimus (Rapamune) that are given to patients to prevent rejection. It is well known that patients on immunosuppressant medications are at increased risk from viral infections, such as influenza. However, it is not well understood how immunosuppressive medications may uniquely affect the immune response to infection. This study will determine whether there are unique differences in the effects on the immune system by these different immunosuppressive medications, particularly differences between tacrolimus and sirolimus.
- Detailed Description
While the benefits of transplantation to society are substantial, the ever-growing population of immunosuppressed recipients poses a unique challenge in development of immunization and containment strategies to protect the population from communicable pathogens and weaponized infectious agents. The immunosuppressive regimens that have allowed the emergence of successful transplant therapy not only inhibit T cell-dependent rejection but also cause systemic immunosuppression, which attenuates the response to vaccines in general and precludes the use of live attenuated vaccines. To date, there has been relatively little detailed systematic study of the immune alterations that accompany either the short- or long-term immunosuppressive regimens used in clinical organ transplantation. Despite the recent development of increasingly effective, but also increasingly complex, regimens using drugs with very distinct molecular targets, current policies on vaccination of transplant recipients are generic and remain based on old concepts rather than on any new understanding of the cellular and molecular effects of these therapies on the human immune system. This proposal seeks to improve our understanding of the biological mechanisms that underlie the distinct immunosuppressive regimens in practice today (calcineurin-inhibitor, or CNI, and sirolimus-based regimens) and in emerging regimens that employ agents with novel mechanisms of action, such as the CD28 costimulation blockers, and/or JAK3 kinase inhibitors. Such knowledge will be critical to strategies for enhancing desirable immune responses while not precipitating rejection.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 124
- Male or female patients between 18 and 59 years of age
- Patients capable of understanding the purposes and risks of the study, who can give written informed consent and who are willing to participate in and comply with the study.
- Women of childbearing potential must have a negative serum pregnancy test within 7 days prior to enrollment and must not be breast-feeding.
- Patients with any prior organ transplant or multi-organ transplant recipients
- Patients that require induction immunosuppression beyond the immunosuppressive regimen proposed in this study. For example, patients that receive anti-lymphocyte antibody therapy or plasmapheresis as a result of pre-formed immunologic reactivity to the transplanted organ.
- Patients with evidence of an active systemic infection requiring the continued use of antibiotics, evidence of an HIV infection, or the presence of a chronic active hepatitis B or C.
- Patients with history of malignancy in the last 5 years (except successfully treated localized non-melanotic skin cancer)
- Patients with severe anemia (hemoglobin < 8 g/dL), leukopenia (WBC < 3000/mm3). -
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method To determine the effects of chronic immunosuppressive therapies on adaptive immunity 2 years To determine the effects of chronic immunosuppressive therapies on innate immunity, dendritic cell phenotype and function and TLR signaling 2 years To define the transcriptional signatures associated with specific immunosuppressive regimens 2 years
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Emory University
🇺🇸Atlanta, Georgia, United States