Clinical Trials for Transplantation
Promoting Tolerance to Peanut in High-Risk Children (LEAP)
Infants who suffer from eczema or egg allergy have a 1 in 5 chance of developing peanut allergy by age 5. This study is evaluating whether consuming or avoiding peanut early in life can reduce the risk of peanut allergy in these high risk children.
Learn more:
Belatacept to Prevent Organ Rejection in Kidney Transplant Patients
Belatacept is an experimental medication shown in clinical trials to
have immune system suppression properties in people who have had kidney
transplants. This study will determine whether a combination of
anti-rejection drugs, including belatacept, can prevent the rejection
of a first-time, non-HLA identical kidney transplant and allow patients
to be safely withdrawn from anti-rejection therapy one year
post-transplant.
Learn more:
Gradual Withdrawal of Immunosuppression in Patients Receiving a Liver Transplant (AWISH)
In order to prevent organ rejection, patients receiving liver transplants currently require life-long treatment with immune system-suppressing medications. However, these medications can cause long-term side effects, such as infection, kidney problems, diabetes, and cancer. This study is investigating whether liver transplant recipients can slowly be taken off these drugs under medical supervision.
Learn more:
Immunosuppression Withdrawal for Pediatric Living-Donor Liver Transplant Recipients (WISP-R)
Antirejection medicines, also known as immunosuppressive drugs, are
prescribed to organ transplant recipients to prevent their bodies from
rejecting the new organ. Long-term use of these drugs places transplant
recipients at higher risk of serious infections and certain types of
cancer. The purpose of this study is to determine whether
immunosuppressive drugs can be safely withdrawn over a minimum of 9
months from children who received liver transplants at least 4 years
ago.
Learn more:
A Phase II study of multiple doses of hOKT3γ-1(Ala-Ala) for new onset type 1 diabetes (AbATE)
hOKT3gamma1 (Ala-Ala) is a man-made antibody that is commonly used to
prevent organ rejection. The purpose of this study is determine whether
hOKT3gamma1 (Ala-Ala) can halt the progression of type
1 diabetes in patients diagnosed within the past 60 days.
Learn more:
Study of Thymoglobulin to Arrest Type 1 Diabetes (START)
Thymoglobulin is an antibody preparation that is commonly used to treat
and prevent organ transplant rejection. The START trial aims to
determine whether Thymoglobulin treatment can halt the progression of
newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes when given within six weeks of disease
diagnosis.
Learn more:
A Phase I Trial of IL-2 and Sirolimus in Recent-onset Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus
This is a phase I trial in individuals who have been diagnosed with
type 1 diabetes within the previous 3-48 months. The study is testing
whether two immune system modifying drugs are safe when used in
combination and if they have immune altering effects that indicate they
can halt the progression of type 1 diabetes progression.
Learn more:
ITN Registry of Tolerant Kidney Transplant Recipients
Immunosuppressive drugs are all that separate transplant recipients from rejecting their transplanted organs. The ITN Registry of Tolerant Kidney Transplant Recipients is searching for those rare kidney transplant recipients who have stopped their immunosuppression, but for some reason have not rejected their transplants. If you have received a kidney transplant and have been off all immunosuppressive medications for 1 year and have good kidney function, or if you received your kidney from an identical twin, you may be eligible to participate.
Learn more:
Cytokine production in blood leukocytes of prediabetic children and effect of intranasal insulin
This study is being performed in collaboration with the Finnish Diabetes Prediction and Prevention project that is studying individuals in various stages of prediabetes and who will receive intranasal insulin as part of a secondary prevention trial. The ITN is funding the support of additional laboratory studies that hope to identify biomarkers that can predict the onset of type 1 diabetes, and to learn more about the natural history of the disease.
Learn more:
Abatacept and Cyclophosphamide Combination: Efficacy and Safety Study (ACCESS) for Lupus Nephritis
This study is for people with lupus who have developed complications in
their kidneys, or lupus nephritis. The study will determine whether
adding the experimental medication abatacept to standard
cyclophosphamide therapy is more effective in improving lupus nephritis
than standard cyclophosphamide therapy by itself.
Learn more: