Purpose

The trial is an observational, multi-center study to determine if a new blood test (Immunobiogram®) done after renal transplant can help predict how well the immune system is working and responding to a new kidney. These blood tests could, in the future, potentially guide how doctors manage patient's anti-rejection medication.

Condition

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Between 25 Years and 69 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • Age > 25 years and < 70 years. - Male and Female. - Renal transplant performed at least 1 year before inclusion. ARM 1: - Bad clinical evolution: patients with renal dysfunction and positive biopsy to rejection OR significant increase in strength of DSA expressed as Luminex MFI. Specifically, the following two criteria must comply: - Renal function progressive deterioration, with significant creatinine increase of at least 15% for 18 months and/or proteinuria over > 500 mg/day or ratio protein/creatinine> 500 mg/g DE NOVO or increase in 50%. - Biopsy in the last 12 months that shows positive signs attributable to any kind of immunological response compatible with any type of rejection AND/OR at least 50% increase in strength of DSA expressed as Luminex MFI in comparison with previous determination and always at titers more than 3000UI. - Good clinical evolution: patients without rejection episodes, negative DSA, stable renal function and no changes in treatment in the past 12 months. ALL the following criteria must apply - Stable renal function in the past 12 months - NO DSA titers - No history of previous rejection episodes - Stable immunosuppressive medication (No change in prednisone or MPA dose and tacrolimus dose with changes <20% of the dose) in the past 12 months ARM 2: - Stable renal function - No DSA titers - No history of previous rejection episodes - Stable immunosuppressive medication (No change in prednisone or MPA dose and tacrolimus dose with changes <20% of the dose) at least in the past 18 months

Exclusion Criteria

  • Rejection of informed consent - Active systemic infections that needed antimicrobial treatment in the past two months - Active immune-based diseases with acute outbreaks in the past 12 months, despite immunosuppressive treatment - Severe ischemia-reperfusion injury of current renal transplant with delayed graft function objectively evident at more than 20 days after transplant AND/OR kidney transplanted from a deceased, very elderly donor (>80 years) - Double transplant (renal + another organ) - HIV, HBV, HCV infection or other severe infectious diseases that prevent blood samples from being processed in a conventional laboratory - Chronic Allograft Injury (CAI) unlikely related to immune processes, by the Investigator´s judgement - Recurrent primary kidney disease

Study Design

Phase
Study Type
Observational
Observational Model
Case-Only
Time Perspective
Cross-Sectional

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
ARM 1-Bad vs Good Clinical Evolution This arm is intended to evaluate the correlation of Immunobiogram® sensitivity/resistance patterns with clinical prognosis as it may be judged at this moment considering clinical outcomes and immune-biomarker evolution in the past 12 to 18 months. Thus, it may confirm the BH-Pilot study findings. Renal transplant patients of two types will be included: Patients who, over previous months, have had a bad clinical evolution, in which rejection mechanisms were involved Patients with a good and stable clinical evolution IMBG sensitivity/resistance profiles will be compared amongst the two groups to evaluate the differences.
  • Other: NA-Observational only
    NA-Observational only
ARM 2-Stable Renal Transplant Patients This arm is intended to evaluate robustness of Immunobiogram® as an IVD test. Thus, it will be performed intrasubject comparisons and inter-time evaluation of two sets of Immunobiogram® separated by 30+/- 10 days, each including three IMBG determinations (IMBGx3 - IMBGx3, the two sets separated by 30+/- 10 days). The intended evaluation will be to analyse the similarities between all IMBG tests performed, both between the same set and also between the two sets planned.
  • Other: NA-Observational only
    NA-Observational only

More Details

Status
Completed
Sponsor
Biohope Scientific Solutions for Human Health, S.L.

Study Contact

Detailed Description

Rejection in renal transplants is a major problem unsolved in the long term, as 30-50% of patients lose their kidney due to rejection, or rejection mechanisms are involved elsewhere. One of the presumed key factors that may deliver such bad outcomes is the difficulties to personalise immunosuppressive treatment; a medical need that currently relies on immunosuppressive levels for some medications (pharmacokinetics), clinical guideline recommendations, adverse events profiles and some expensive biomarkers which are not widely used. Immunobiogram® (IMBG) is a tool that evaluates the sensitivity/resistance profile of patients to each of the most widely used and representative immunosuppressant drugs (IM). Thus, IMBG offers information that could become pivotal in clinical management of renal transplanted patients, if its potential benefits are proven. In this clinical study, a technology validation will be performed in which the robustness of the bioassay will be evaluated; and a correlation between the current clinical prognoses of each patient and resistance patterns will be explored.

Notice

Study information shown on this site is derived from ClinicalTrials.gov (a public registry operated by the National Institutes of Health). The listing of studies provided is not certain to be all studies for which you might be eligible. Furthermore, study eligibility requirements can be difficult to understand and may change over time, so it is wise to speak with your medical care provider and individual research study teams when making decisions related to participation.