Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03382301

Ciclosporin A Preconditioning for Renal Artery Stenosis

Impact of a Ciclosporin A Preconditioning for Prevention of Ischemia-reperfusion Injury After Renal Artery Stenosis Dilation

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
5 (actual)
Sponsor
Hospices Civils de Lyon · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Renal artery stenosis is one the leading cause of secondary hypertension. Previous randomized controlled trials in humans have failed to demonstrate an improvement of renal function after stenosis dilation, probably because of a selection bias with more severe patients being excluded from randomization. Renal ischemia-reperfusion injuries have also not been taken into account. Indeed, reperfusion leads to a rapid renal blood flow recovery associated with renal ischemia-reperfusion injuries. Mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) is a key player in the occurrence of ischemia reperfusion injuries because its opening leads to mitochondria leakage and cell death. However, preconditioning whether pharmacological or ischemic can prevent mPTP opening and protect cells. Ciclosporin A can prolong mPTP closing during reperfusion and reduce renal and cardiac tissular lesions. Another mPTP blocker (Bendavia) has been associated with an improvement of renal blood flow (RBF) and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) after renal artery stenosis dilation at 6 weeks in pigs. Based on a recent study, dilation overall benefit could be secondary to an improvement of the contralateral kidney GFR and tissue oxygen content, requiring a single kidney evaluation of those renal functional parameters. The investigators previously demonstrated that dose and timing of ciclosporin A preconditioning is key to protect kidneys from ischemia-reperfusion injuries. Previous controlled trials that failed to demonstrate a benefit of ciclosporin A conditioning have used post conditioning on necrotic cells. Considering kidney ischemia-reperfusion injuries, preconditioning have led to more encouraging results compared to ciclosporin A post conditioning in animals. Therefore the investigators aim to conduct the first clinical study of ciclosporin A preconditioning for prevention of kidney ischemia-reperfusion injuries after renal artery stenosis dilation. Using renal functional imaging and the new PET-MRI (Positron Emission Tomography-Magnetic Resonance Imaging) combined device, the investigators will evaluate kidney perfusion, oxidative metabolism, glomerular filtration rate and oxygen content before and 3 months after renal artery stenosis dilation with or without a ciclosporin A preconditioning.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGCiclosporin A preconditioning before renal artery stenosis dilationCiclosporin A perfusion (2.5 mg/kg) for 1 hour before renal artery dilation
DRUGNaCl preconditioning before renal artery stenosis dilationNaCl perfusion (Saline perfusion) for 1 hour (2.5 mg/kg) before renal artery dilation

Timeline

Start date
2018-08-28
Primary completion
2020-06-18
Completion
2020-06-18
First posted
2017-12-22
Last updated
2024-05-08

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03382301. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.