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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00373165

Prophylaxis With Ganciclovir Improves Graft Survival in Renal Allograft Recipients

Open, Randomised Study Comparing Preemptive Therapy With Intravenous Ganciclovir With and Without Additional Oral Ganciclovir for CMV Prophylaxis in Immunosuppressed Renal Transplant Patients Receiving Monitoring of CMV Viral Load

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
150 (planned)
Sponsor
Lower Saxony Center for Nephrology · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Study Phase: IV Study Type: Open-label, multicenter, randomised clinical trial with two arms stratified for an intensified immunosuppressive regimen in patients at high risk for acute rejection. Study Description: 148 kidney transplant recipients at risk for CMV disease were randomized and treated with ganciclovir capsules for 3 months (Group A, prophylaxis, N=74) or received ganciclovir IV only in case of proven CMV viral load (Group B, preemptive therapy, N=74). Initially, a 2 months follow up was planned in this trial. However, the study group decided to offer a longterm follow up to all patients and amended the protocol, respectively. The aim of the study was to identify the most efficacious way to prevent renal transplant recipients from CMV disease and to find out, if one of these two strategies may increase graft or patient survival. Therefore, both wellknown approaches of CMV prevention were compared in two study groups: Prophylaxis (Group A): Oral primary prophylaxis with ganciclovir capsules was started directly after transplantation and performed until day 90. In case of CMV infection (proven CMV viral load) or symptomatic CMV disease, treatment with ganciclovir IV was initiated. Preemptive Therapy (Group B): No oral primary prophylaxis was given. Treatment with ganciclovir IV was given to patients with proven CMV viral load (CMV infection or CMV disease) only.

Detailed description

Disease Background: More than 60 % of adult people are asymptomatically infected with cytomegalovirus (CMV). Due to immunosuppressive therapy, renal graft recipients are at risk for CMV infection and life-threatening disease. CMV can cause a variety of symptoms in the immunocompromised host, including CMV retinitis, pneumonia or colitis. After grafting, CMV disease most commonly occurs in the transplanted organ and can trigger graft dysfunction and acute rejection. Therefore, prophylaxis or preemptive therapy should be used in order to prevent graft recipients from CMV disease. * CMV prophylaxis means the administration of antiviral agents to all patients at risk for CMV disease, directly after transplantation, i.e. for 3 months. Prophylaxis is in particular used for patients at high risk for CMV disease. * CMV preemptive therapy (or targeted prophylaxis) means CMV monitoring and initiation of induction therapy with antiviral agents in patients with proven CMV viral load only (CMV infection). This prevents non-infected patients from being exposed to antiviral drugs and the related side effects like neutropenia or renal toxicity. Preemptive therapy is in particular used for patients at lower or moderate risk for CMV disease. Study Description: 148 kidney transplant recipients at risk for CMV disease were randomized and treated with ganciclovir capsules for 3 months (Group A, prophylaxis, N=74) or received ganciclovir IV only in case of proven CMV viral load (Group B, preemptive therapy, N=74). Initially, a 2 months follow up was planned in this trial. However, the study group decided to offer a longterm follow up to all patients and amended the protocol, respectively. The aim of the study was to identify the most efficacious way to prevent renal transplant recipients from CMV disease and to find out, if one of these two strategies may increase graft or patient survival. Therefore, both wellknown approaches of CMV prevention were compared in two study groups: Prophylaxis (Group A): Oral primary prophylaxis with ganciclovir capsules was started directly after transplantation and performed until day 90. In case of CMV infection (proven CMV viral load) or symptomatic CMV disease, treatment with ganciclovir IV was initiated. Preemptive Therapy (Group B): No oral primary prophylaxis was given. Treatment with ganciclovir IV was given to patients with proven CMV viral load (CMV infection or CMV disease) only.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGGanciclovir

Timeline

Start date
2000-08-01
Completion
2003-10-01
First posted
2006-09-07
Last updated
2006-09-13

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00373165. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.