Eduction in ImmunoSuppressive Regimen Among Kidney Transplant Recipients Patients Admitted to the Intensive Care Unit for Septic Shock and/or Acute Respiratory Failure

NCT ID: NCT06881927

Last Updated: 2025-11-18

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

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

PHASE4

Total Enrollment

212 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2026-02-01

Study Completion Date

2029-06-01

Brief Summary

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Kidney transplantation is the treatment of choice for end-stage chronic kidney disease. Kidney transplantation is at the first rank of solid organ transplantation in France, with 3,376 grafts performed in 2022. Immunosuppressive therapy, required to prevent graft rejection, exposes graft recipients to complications related to decreased immunity, including opportunistic infections and neoplastic complications.

After the earlt post-transplantation period, up to 10% of kidney transplant recipients will require admission to the intensive care unit (ICU). The main reasons for admission are septic shock and acute hypoxemic respiratory failure. ICU stay has a significant impact on these patients with a mortality rate reaching 40%, that remains increased even after ICU discharge. Furthermore, an impact on graft function has been demonstrated, with deterioration of graft function in 1/3 of patients, and among those, up to one in two will require resumption of renal replacement therapy (RRT).

Although the occurrence of septic shock or acute respiratory failure related to an infection is more common and severe, the optimal management strategy for immunosuppressors is not defined in kidney transplant recipients admitted to the ICU in those settings.

Maintain a high level of immunosuppressive therapies may hinder the recovery from the acute critical condition. Furthermore, these treatments have a narrow therapeutic index; for instance, the management of calcineurin inhibitors is challenging in the ICU due to pharmacodynamic changes associated with the acute situation (distribution volume, organ failure) and the numerous potential drug interactions that carry inherent risks of overdose.

the investigators hypothesize that a reduction in the level of immunosuppressive treatments could promote recovery in kidney transplant recipients admitted to the ICU for septic shock and/or acute hypoxemic respiratory failure, without adversely affecting the risk of rejection or long-term renal prognosis.

Detailed Description

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Conditions

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Sepsis and Septic Shock Acute Respiratory Failure Kidney Transplant Recipients Immunosuppressive Agents

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

SUPPORTIVE_CARE

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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reduction of the level of immunosuppression

In this arm, the usual immunosuppressive treatment of the patients will be discontinued.

Patients will receive hydrocortisone hemisuccinate 200 mg per day (slow direct intraveinous injection of 50 mg four times a day, or through an electric syringe pump).

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

reduction of the level of immunosuppression

Intervention Type OTHER

In this arm, the usual immunosuppressive treatment of the patients will be discontinued.

Patients will receive hydrocortisone hemisuccinate 200 mg per day (slow direct intraveinous injection of 50 mg four times a day, or through an electric syringe pump).

usual immunosuppression maintenance

In this group: patients will receive hydrocortisone hemisuccinate 200 mg per day (slow direct intraveinous injection of 50 mg four times a day, or through an electric syringe pump).

The usual treatment with immunosuppressive agents will be continue: calcineurin inhibitors and/or mTOR inhibitors and/or Azathioprine, and/or Mycophénolate Mofétil (MMF)/Mycophenolice Acide (MPA).

For MMF/MPA, at the discretion of the treating clinicians, dosage may be reduced or drug discontinued.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Hydrocortisone Hemisuccinate: 200 mg per day.

Intervention Type DRUG

The hydrocortisone hemisuccinate is a powder and solvent for injectable solution at 100 mg. The powder must be dissolved in the solvent to ensure final isotonicity. The solution must be used within 24 hours. The injection is performed as a slow direct IV injection, either via an electric syringe pump or as a bolus of 50 mg every 6 hours

Interventions

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Hydrocortisone Hemisuccinate: 200 mg per day.

The hydrocortisone hemisuccinate is a powder and solvent for injectable solution at 100 mg. The powder must be dissolved in the solvent to ensure final isotonicity. The solution must be used within 24 hours. The injection is performed as a slow direct IV injection, either via an electric syringe pump or as a bolus of 50 mg every 6 hours

Intervention Type DRUG

reduction of the level of immunosuppression

In this arm, the usual immunosuppressive treatment of the patients will be discontinued.

Patients will receive hydrocortisone hemisuccinate 200 mg per day (slow direct intraveinous injection of 50 mg four times a day, or through an electric syringe pump).

Intervention Type OTHER

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* \- Adult patients, aged 18 years-old and over,
* Kidney transplant recipients, with transplantation occurring more than 3 months prior to ICU admission
* Patients admitted to the ICU in the setting of:

* Septic shock (sepsis requiring vasopressor support, with or without hyperlactatemia),
* And/or acute respiratory failure of presumed infectious origin (invasive or non-invasive ventilation, FiO2 greater than or equal to 50%),
* Patients treated with at least an immunosuppressive bitherapy (including steroids, calcineurin inhibitors, mTOR inhibitors, azathioprine, or mycophenolate mofetil),
* Patients affiliated with a social health insurance protection scheme,
* Patients able of understanding the objectives and risks related to the research and providing a dated and signed informed consent. If patient is unable to consent: consent from relatives will be searched, and if absent, an emergency procedure will be process.
* Women of childbearing potential, provided they have a negative blood pregnancy test on the day of the inclusion visit.

Exclusion Criteria

* Minor patients,
* Patients unable to consent: under legal protection measures, patients deprived of liberty,
* Kidney transplant recipients treated with Belatacept due to the persistent effect of Belatacept, it is not possible to modulate this treatment in a short term period,
* Patients with severe chronic graft dysfunction (glomerular filtration rate \< 20 ml/min/1.73m² according to the CKD-EPI formula in the month prior to admission),
* Transplant renal recipients who have already resumed RRT (hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis),
* Multi-organ transplant recipients,
* Pregnant women
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University Hospital, Strasbourg, France

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Central Contacts

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Sarah Hustache

Role: CONTACT

Other Identifiers

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9416

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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