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- Jordan, Stanley C., et al.
(författare)
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Imlifidase desensitization in crossmatch-positive, highly-sensitized kidney transplant recipients : Results of an international phase 2 trial (Highdes)
- 2021
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Ingår i: Transplantation. - 0041-1337 .- 1534-6080. ; 105:8, s. 1808-1817
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Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
- BACKGROUND: Highly-HLA sensitized patients have limited access to life-saving kidney transplantation due to a paucity of immunologically suitable donors. Imlifidase is a cysteine protease that cleaves IgG leading to a rapid decrease in antibody level and inhibition of IgG-mediated injury. This study investigates the efficacy and safety of imlifidase in converting a positive crossmatch test to negative, allowing highly sensitized patients to be transplanted with a living or deceased donor kidney.METHODS: This open-label, single arm, phase 2 trial conducted at five transplant centers, evaluated the ability of imlifidase to create a negative crossmatch test within 24 hours. Secondary endpoints included post-imlifidase DSA levels compared to pre-dose levels, renal function, and pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic profiles. Safety endpoints included adverse events and immunogenicity profile.RESULTS: 89.5% of the transplanted patients demonstrated conversion of baseline positive crossmatch to negative within 24 hours after imlifidase treatment. DSA most often rebounded 3-14 days post-imlifidase dose, with substantial interpatient variability. Patient survival was 100% with graft survival of 88.9% at 6 months. 38.9% had early biopsy proven antibody mediated rejection with onset 2-19 days post-transplantation. Serum IgG levels began to normalize after ~3-7 days post-transplantation. Anti-drug antibody levels were consistent with previous studies. Seven adverse events in six patients were classified as possibly or probably related to treatment and were mild-moderate in severity.CONCLUSIONS: Imlifidase was well tolerated, converted positive crossmatches to negative, and enabled patients with a median cPRA of 99.83% to undergo kidney transplantation resulting in good kidney function and graft survival at 6 months.
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2. |
- Kjellman, Christian, et al.
(författare)
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Outcomes at 3 years posttransplant in imlifidase-desensitized kidney transplant patients
- 2021
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Ingår i: American Journal of Transplantation. - : Elsevier. - 1600-6135 .- 1600-6143. ; 21:12, s. 3907-3918
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Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
- Imlifidase is a cysteine proteinase which specifically cleaves IgG, inhibiting Fc-mediated effector function within hours of administration. Imlifidase converts a positive crossmatch to a potential donor (T cell, B cell, or both), to negative, enabling transplantation to occur between previously HLA incompatible donor-recipient pairs. To date, 39 crossmatch positive patients received imlifidase prior to a kidney transplant in four single-arm, open-label, phase 2 studies. At 3 years, for patients who were AMR+ compared to AMR-, death-censored allograft survival was 93% vs 77%, patient survival was 85% vs 94%, and mean eGFR was 49 ml/min/1.73 m2 vs 61 ml/min/1.73 m2 , respectively. The incidence of AMR was 38% with most episodes occurring within the first month post-transplantation. Sub-analysis of patients deemed highly sensitized with cPRA ≥ 99.9%, and unlikely to be transplanted who received crossmatch-positive, deceased donor transplants had similar rates of patient survival, graft survival, and eGFR but a higher rate of AMR. These data demonstrate that outcomes and safety up to 3 years in recipients of imlifidase-enabled allografts is comparable to outcomes in other highly sensitized patients undergoing HLA-incompatible transplantation. Thus, imlifidase is a potent option to facilitate transplantation among patients who have a significant immunologic barrier to successful kidney transplantation.
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