Functional Non Specific Immunity Monitoring After Kidney Transplantation Using an Interferon Gamma Test

NCT ID: NCT03572842

Last Updated: 2024-08-01

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

134 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2019-01-24

Study Completion Date

2023-10-11

Brief Summary

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The best renal replacement therapy is kidney transplantation. It improves end-stage renal kidney disease (ESRD) patients quality of life and increases their survival, but still remains risky. Morbidity in kidney transplantation is dominated by two main complications : acute graft rejection and infections. To maintain an accurate balance between rejection and infection, immunosuppressive therapy must to be used with caution and kept into a tight spectrum.

The investigators dispose of a new test measuring interferon gamma production after T cells and Natural Killers (NK) in vitro stimulation : QuantiFERON Monitor® (QFM). They hypothesized QFM monitoring could improve management after kidney transplantation providing functional immune data to optimize balance between rejection and infection.

The investigators aim to assess whether QFM could be an objective biomarker to predict infection and rejection risks after kidney transplantation.

Detailed Description

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The best renal replacement therapy is kidney transplantation. It improves end-stage renal kidney disease (ESRD) patients quality of life and increases their survival, but still remains risky. Morbidity in kidney transplantation is dominated by two main complications : acute graft rejection and infections. According to literature, acute rejection appears in more than 10% of kidney graft recipients. The first month after transplantation is frequently affected by bacterial infections such as pneumopathies (4.5 to 16%), urinary tract infections (22.7 to 56.7 %), surgical site infections (7.3 to 18.5%) and bacteremia (3.5 to 4.6%). Then, during the first year, infections, most of them opportunist ones, are essentially due to cytomegalovirus (8%), BK virus (most than 10%) and herpes simplex reactivation (most than 50%). Those immunosuppressed patients can also develop community acquired infections : respiratory tract infections (flu or bacterial pneumonias) or urinary tract infections. Therefore, long-term anticalcineurin use can lead to chronic graft dysfunction. To maintain an accurate balance between rejection and infection, immunosuppressive therapy must to be used with caution and kept into a tight spectrum. To guide physicians maintaining this balance, therapeutic drug monitoring is performed in routine.

An objective marker for cellular immune response, based on cellular immunodeficiency status specific for each patient could, guide a personalized immunosuppressive treatment. The investigators now dispose of a new test measuring interferon gamma production after T cells and Natural Killers (NK) in vitro stimulation : QuantiFERON Monitor® (QFM). They hypothesized QFM monitoring could improve management after kidney transplantation providing functional immune data to optimize balance between rejection and infection.

The best renal replacement therapy is kidney transplantation. It improves end-stage renal kidney disease (ESRD) patients quality of life and increases their survival, but still remains risky. Morbidity in kidney transplantation is dominated by two main complications : acute graft rejection and infections. According to literature, acute rejection appears in more than 10% of kidney graft recipients. The first month after transplantation is frequently affected by bacterial infections such as pneumopathies (4.5 to 16%), urinary tract infections (22.7 to 56.7 %), surgical site infections (7.3 to 18.5%) and bacteremia (3.5 to 4.6%). Then, during the first year, infections, most of them opportunist ones, are essentially due to cytomegalovirus (8%), BK virus (most than 10%) and herpes simplex reactivation (most than 50%). Those immunosuppressed patients can also develop community acquired infections : respiratory tract infections (flu or bacterial pneumonias) or urinary tract infections. Therefore, long-term anticalcineurin use can lead to chronic graft dysfunction. To maintain an accurate balance between rejection and infection, immunosuppressive therapy must to be used with caution and kept into a tight spectrum. To guide physicians maintaining this balance, therapeutic drug monitoring is performed in routine.

An objective marker for cellular immune response, based on cellular immunodeficiency status specific for each patient could, guide a personalized immunosuppressive treatment. The investigators now dispose of a new test measuring interferon gamma production after T cells and Natural Killers (NK) in vitro stimulation : QuantiFERON Monitor® (QFM). They hypothesized QFM monitoring could improve management after kidney transplantation providing functional immune data to optimize balance between rejection and infection.

They aim to assess whether QFM could be an objective biomarker to predict infection and rejection risks after kidney transplantation.

The investigators plan to perform a monocentric interventional prospective study. They will dose QFM at D0, before patients discharge (between D7 and D21), M3 and M6 after kidney transplantation. Patients will be followed up to 24 months.

Their primary endpoint will be non specific cellular immunity evaluation after kidney transplantation using serial measurements of QFM. Their secondary endpoints will be : (i) correlate QFM levels with infectious risk, (ii) and with graft rejection, (iii) correlate QFM levels with lymphocytes sub-populations monitoring.

The investigators aim to assess whether QFM could be an objective biomarker to predict infection and rejection risks after kidney transplantation.

They plan to perform a monocentric interventional prospective study. They will dose QFM at D0, before patients discharge (between D7 and D21), M3 and M6 after kidney transplantation. Patients will be followed up to 24 months. Their primary endpoint will be non specific cellular immunity evaluation after kidney transplantation using serial measurements of QFM. The investigator's secondary endpoints will be : (i) correlate QFM levels with infectious risk, (ii) and with graft rejection, (iii) correlate QFM levels with lymphocytes sub-populations monitoring.

Conditions

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Kidney Transplantation

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

DIAGNOSTIC

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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quantiferon monitor

Test measuring interferon gamma production after T cells and Natural Killers (NK) in vitro stimulation : QuantiFERON Monitor® (QFM)

Group Type OTHER

quantiferon monitor test

Intervention Type OTHER

different blood test with quantiferon monitor

Interventions

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quantiferon monitor test

different blood test with quantiferon monitor

Intervention Type OTHER

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Kidney transplantation in Nice University Hospital during the inclusion period
* Free and informed consent
* Age \> 18 years-old

Exclusion Criteria

* Current infection
* Vulnerable people (minors, guardianship or curatorship, pregnant women, deprivation of liberty, person who does not speak French)
* Non-affiliated person with Social Security
* Kidney transplantation contraindication Exclusion criterion
* Transplantectomy before sixth month
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nice

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Barbara SEITZ-POLSKI, Dr

Role: STUDY_CHAIR

Nephrology Department, Nice University Hospital

Marion CREMONI GAUCI

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Nephrology Department, Nice University Hospital

Locations

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Nephrology Department, Nice University Hospital

Nice, , France

Site Status

Countries

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France

Other Identifiers

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18-AOI-04

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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