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BIOtechnology Applied to Renal TRansplantation With IMmunobiogram

Recruiting
18 years of age
Both
Phase N/A

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Overview

Immunobiogram (IMBG) is a novel in vitro diagnostic bioassay developed by Biohope Scientific Solutions for Human Health SL, that allows to measure the pharmacodynamic response to individual immunosuppressive drugs in patients with a renal transplantation. Pharmacodynamics can complement the already available pharmacokinetic information on immunosuppressants and enable a more individualized evaluation of the immunosuppressive therapy.

The aim of this study is to evaluate the association between the pharmacodynamic response to individual immunosuppressants taken by the patient measured in vitro with IMBG and the existence of signs of graft rejection in biopsies (upon indication or protocol) performed in a sample of kidney transplant patients.

The main hypothesis is that a lower sensitivity to the immunosuppressive drugs taken by the patient will be associated with a higher probability of rejection.

Description

Immunobiogram (IMBG) is a novel bioassay that allows to measure in vitro the inhibitory effect of a battery of individual immunosuppressants on the patient's immune cells (immunologically stimulated PBMCs).

Studies conducted in kidney transplant patients have shown that IMBG is a valid and accurate instrument, capable of determining each patient's pharmacodynamic response profile to individual immunosuppressive drugs.

Health professionals who monitor kidney transplant patients currently have information only on immunosuppressant pharmacokinetics to adjust the regimen of the immunosuppressants they use to treat the patients to avoid graft rejection. The pharmacodynamic measurement of the in vitro effect of each immunosuppressant in the patient could complement the pharmacokinetic information and enable more personalized approaches.

The main objective of this study is to evaluate the association between the pharmacodynamic response to individual immunosuppressants taken by the patient measured with IMBG and the existence of signs of graft rejection in biopsies (upon indication or protocol) performed in a sample of kidney transplant patients.

A longitudinal follow-up cohort of patients will be recruited from prior to the transplant (at sites that regularly perform a protocol graft biopsy after a year) and a cross-sectional cohort of patients will also be included when an indication biopsy is performed during the first three years after kidney transplantation due to a suspicion of rejection at sites that do not routinely perform protocol biopsies.

Given that one of the main challenges that clinicians face in the follow-up of patients is to reduce the risk of renal graft rejection, while minimizing the incidence of secondary effects related to immunosuppressive therapy, it is proposed as a secondary objective to evaluate in the longitudinal cohort the incidence of "therapeutical failure" due to graft failure or due to the appearance of serious adverse effects attributable to immunosuppression and analyze its relationship with the profile of sensitivity to immunosuppressants taken by the patient measured with IMBG.

Finally, the changes over time presented by the IMBG in various determinations and the correlation between IMBG results and other lymphocyte activation parameters obtained by flow cytometry will be analyzed.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

Longitudinal cohort:

  1. Patients > 18 years of age.
  2. Candidate to receive a kidney transplant or re-transplant.
  3. Patients in whom it is planned to routinely perform a protocol biopsy one year after the kidney transplant for which there is no contraindication at the time of inclusion in the study.
  4. Patients in whom a pre-transplant blood sample can be drawn that is viable for the processing of an IMBG.
  5. Patients who give their written informed consent to participate in the study.

Cross-sectional cohort:

  1. Patients > 18 years of age.
  2. Patients who have received a kidney transplant or re-transplant less than 3 years before inclusion in the study.
  3. Patients in whom an indication biopsy is to be performed due to suspicion of rejection.
  4. Patients in whom a blood sample can be drawn in a period of time less than 8 days before or after the Indication Biopsy that is viable for the processing of an IMBG.
  5. Patients who give their written informed consent to participate in the study.

Exclusion Criteria (for both cohorts):

  1. Patient with a double transplant (kidney + other organ).
  2. Contraindication for performing a renal graft biopsy.
  3. Active autoimmune diseases in the 12 months prior to the study visit (with systemic inflammatory exacerbation in the year prior to study inclusion, despite immunosuppressive therapy).
  4. Very elderly cadaver donor transplant (>80 years of age).
  5. Donors in asystole II.
  6. Recurrent primary kidney disease in the case of primary focal and segmental hyalinosis or hemolytic-uremic syndrome.
  7. Active HIV, HBV or HCV infection or other severe infections (to prevent risks in the processing of samples in conventional laboratories).
  8. Concomitant medical conditions that may affect the patient's participation in the study.

Study details

Kidney Transplant Failure and Rejection

NCT05816486

Biohope Scientific Solutions for Human Health, S.L.

25 January 2024

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