Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
21 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2013-03-31
2020-07-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Consent and Initial Phase of Enrollment (see Study Protocol Figure- Appendix A) These liver transplant candidates (up to 25 SRL) will be approached for consideration and informed consent into the study. The consent form will include discussion of the risks/benefits of their current therapy (SRL) and the planned minimization/withdrawal. Specifically, the risks of minimization/withdrawal (i.e. developing acute or chronic rejection, alloimmune hepatitis during any portion of the study), although unlikely, will be a major emphasis of the consent process. The consent form will also include the strict requirement for patients to follow all instructions from the PI in regard to the close laboratory follow-up occurring throughout the trial, to diagnose any episode of rejection or concern as early as possible to be able to respond appropriately. All of the study procedures will be discussed with the patient during clinic visits. They will be informed that neither participation nor refusal will influence their clinical care. All laboratory tests or costs related to their care in the study, with the exception of non-standard of care items (i.e. liver biopsies, blood assays), will be the responsibility of the patient and/or his/her insurance company. They will be asked questions afterwards to verify comprehension and then sign the consent form documenting their agreement to participate. A signed copy of the consent form will be given to them. Participation is completely voluntary and they may discontinue participation the study at any time without affecting their care or participation in any other study. No financial compensation will be given.
Screening Evaluation at Enrollment (see Study Protocol Figure) After long term (\> 3 years post-LT, \> 3 months on SRL monotherapy) on SRL monotherapy, inclusion/exclusion criteria will be reviewed and if appropriate, consent as above will be obtained. If the patient agrees and signs consent, baseline standard of care screening laboratories complete blood count, comprehensive metabolic panel, sirolimus (CBC, CMP, SRL trough level, fasting lipid profile, hemoglobin A1C \[HbA1C\], urine protein/creatinine ratio) and non-standard of care biomarker assays (blood immunophenotyping, proteogenomics) and liver biopsy (histology and graft immunohistochemistry) will be performed as dictated by the protocol. In addition, the liver biopsy will be used to determine stability in graft function (i.e. no evidence of rejection or immune-mediated hepatitis) before considering minimization/withdrawal. SRL minimization/withdrawal will only be performed if clinically, biochemically and histologically \[by biopsy; liver transplant pathology read (Yang, Rao)\] stable. Throughout the entire study, liver function tests will be monitored every 2 weeks (monthly is standard of care, so the interim non-standard of care 2 week blood tests will be covered by the study funds). Patients entering the minimization/withdrawal phases will be reduced by a total dose of 50% of their baseline dose every month until patients are on 0.5 mg SRL daily. At this point, every other day dosing will begin x 1 month. If no LFT abnormalities, twice weekly dosing x 1 month, then once a week dosing x 1 month. Prior to complete discontinuation, repeat clinical (screening labs above) and blood biomarker assays (blood immunophenotyping, proteogenomics) will be performed. Liver biopsy will not be performed at this juncture unless there are biochemical signs of liver injury. If complete withdrawal is deemed safe (no evidence of biochemical abnormalities) patients will be withdrawn completely (i.e. the once/week SRL dose discontinued) and followed off IS therapy for one year. In this time period, liver function tests will be monitored every 2 weeks, as usual, and repeat clinical (screening labs above), liver biopsy and blood (blood immunophenotyping, proteogenomics) assays performed at the end of this year or at any concern for rejection.
Blood and Tissue Samples Standard of care laboratories (CBC, CMP) will be performed every month on all patients, and only LFTs performed in the interim 2 weeks between each month (non-standard of care; covered by the study funds) until complete withdrawal. 3 green top 5 mL and 3 red top 5 mL tubes of blood for biomarker assays will be taken on all patients prior to study enrollment, prior to complete withdrawal, and one year after withdrawal or at the time of suspected rejection. Liver biopsy (one 3 cm biopsy- 2 cm for histology and 1 cm for genomic assays) will be performed at baseline (pre-minimization) and 1 year post withdrawal. A separate clinical informed consent will be obtained each time a liver biopsy is performed. If the patient develops elevation in liver transaminases requiring a liver biopsy at any stage of the study protocol, blood (all for immune monitoring (IM) assays) will be requested from the patient at the time of the biopsy. If rejection occurs, the patient will be followed in the study until completion but not be further withdrawn from SRL or have a liver biopsy at the end of the study
Follow-up Laboratory follow-up is described above- every 2 weeks throughout the trial until complete withdrawal. Any biochemical (or clinical) signs or significant liver function test abnormalities will be acted on immediately either by liver biopsy or a pause in IS withdrawal per investigator discretion. All patients will be seen in the clinic every 3 months to assess for any new signs or symptoms or resolution of drug side effects in the minimization or withdrawal arm. Quality of life questionnaires; Post Liver Transplant Quality of Life Instrument (pLTQ) and the Promis-29 profile v1.0 will be administered at the study onset and after successful vs. unsuccessful withdrawal (end of study)
Outcome Measures The primary outcome will be the proportion of patients off SRL therapy with normal liver biochemistry and graft histology at 12 months (i.e. tolerant). Thus, the incidence of graft dysfunction (acute rejection, immune mediated or autoimmune hepatitis, chronic rejection) or non-tolerance will be assessed in this SRL withdrawal group and compared to the historical CNI group (20% tolerant; 80% failure) as the primary endpoint. This rate will be a composite of the cumulative number of biopsy-proven graft dysfunctions requiring conversion back to SRL or additional IS therapy or discontinuation of minimization/withdrawal that occur during the course of the study. Major secondary measures compared will be the predictive capacity of the blood and graft biomarker assays (immunophenotyping, genomic/proteomics) before and after minimization/withdrawal in the success vs. failure groups. Clinical secondary outcomes will be compared: the number of infectious complications, liver biopsy complications, cardiovascular outcomes (i.e. blood pressure, diabetes control, lipid levels), renal function, hematopoietic parameters, gastrointestinal effects, or other side effects of SRL that may or may not improve or develop with minimization/withdrawal. These will all be documented by a study database during patient visits, electronic charts and/or by phone communication. Finally, quality of life (Post Liver Transplant Quality of Life Instrument (pLTQ) and the Promis-29 profile v1.0) will be analyzed at the end of the study to determine the effect of IS minimization/withdrawal on other health benefits.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
DIAGNOSTIC
NONE
Study Groups
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Single-arm study Sirolimus Withdrawal
SRL minimization will be performed if clinically, biochemically and histologically stable. Patients entering the minimization phases will be reduced every month by 50% of total dose of Sirolimus until they reach .5mg daily for one month. Then .5 mg every other day, then twice weekly, the once weekly dosing. This should take approximately 6 month to complete minimization. Liver function tests will be monitored every 2 weeks. For any patient developing liver dysfunction, liver biopsy will be performed. Patients will then be completely withdrawn and followed post-withdrawal for 12 months.
Sirolimus
SRL minimization will be performed if clinically, biochemically and histologically stable. Patients entering the minimization phases will be reduced every month by 50% of total dose of Sirolimus until they reach .5mg daily for one month. Then .5 mg every other day, then twice weekly, the once weekly dosing. This should take approximately 6 month to complete minimization. Liver function tests will be monitored every 2 weeks. For any patient developing liver dysfunction, liver biopsy will be performed. Patients will then be completely withdrawn and followed post-withdrawal for 12 months.
Interventions
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Sirolimus
SRL minimization will be performed if clinically, biochemically and histologically stable. Patients entering the minimization phases will be reduced every month by 50% of total dose of Sirolimus until they reach .5mg daily for one month. Then .5 mg every other day, then twice weekly, the once weekly dosing. This should take approximately 6 month to complete minimization. Liver function tests will be monitored every 2 weeks. For any patient developing liver dysfunction, liver biopsy will be performed. Patients will then be completely withdrawn and followed post-withdrawal for 12 months.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Patients who underwent primary living or deceased donor liver transplantation ≥ 3 years (previous to screening ) and on ≥ 3 months of stable SRL monotherapy
3. Recipient of single organ transplant only
4. Liver transplant for non-immune, non-viral (no hepatitis B or hepatitis C virus unless currently non-viremic) causes
5. Ability to provide informed consent and to comply with the study protocol of IS withdrawal.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Acute cellular rejection within 12 months prior to enrollment
3. Viral (viremic hepatitis B virus \[HBV\] or hepatitis C virus \[HCV\]) or immune-mediated liver disease (Autoimmune hepatitis, primary sclerosing cholangitis, primary biliary cirrhosis) history
4. Abnormal liver function tests: Direct bilirubin ≥ 1 mg/dL; (\[ALT, AST, GGT\] or alkaline phosphatase \[AlkPhos\] ≥ 2x \[ULN\]); 5) Abnormal graft histology at enrollment: a) ≥ Grade 2 inflammation or stage 2 fibrosis; b) Acute or Chronic Rejection; c) De-novo Autoimmune Hepatitis; d) inflammation of \>50% of portal tracts; e) Other pathology not-specified but deemed high risk per the PI and pathologist; 6) Ongoing or recurrent substance abuse
7\) Retransplantation or combined liver-other organ 8) Human Immunodeficiency Virus(HIV) co-infection 9) Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR)\<30 ml/min by estimated glomerular filtration rate (\[eGFR\]-\[MDRD-4\])
18 Years
75 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Northwestern University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Josh Levitsky
Associate Professor
Principal Investigators
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Josh Levitsky, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Northwestern University
Locations
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Northwestern University
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Countries
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References
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Levitsky J, Burrell BE, Kanaparthi S, Turka LA, Kurian S, Sanchez-Fueyo A, Lozano JJ, Demetris A, Lesniak A, Kirk AD, Stempora L, Yang GY, Mathew JM. Immunosuppression Withdrawal in Liver Transplant Recipients on Sirolimus. Hepatology. 2020 Aug;72(2):569-583. doi: 10.1002/hep.31036. Epub 2020 Jun 8.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Other Identifiers
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STU00072766
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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