Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Active Not Recruiting

Active Not RecruitingNCT06063213

Using Transcriptional Assessment of Immune Response to Assess Immunosuppression After Liver Transplantation

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
40 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Florida · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

To develop a prospective quantitative liver allograft monitoring protocol and retrospectively validate the use of Phenotypic personalized medicine (PPM) in immunosuppression dosing in liver transplant recipients.

Detailed description

The investigators have developed a computational approach, Phenotypic Personalized Medicine (PPM), to utilize empiric clinical data to construct patient-specific visual maps that represent each individual's phenotypic response to drug treatment. Because this process does not require a priori knowledge of disease mechanism, it can effectively personalize drug dosing for any disease despite frequent changes to treatment regimens or patient physiology and genetics. In a pilot randomized controlled trial and its follow-up larger trial, the investigators have shown that transplant patients prospectively dosed with PPM-determined tacrolimus doses had improved drug trough-level management compared with standard of care physician-determined tacrolimus doses. The ultimate objective in this project is to improve graft and patient outcomes in solid organ transplant recipients by using PPM to optimize immunosuppression dosing. The investigators hypothesize that existing and clinically validated quantifiable markers of immune state and allograft injury are clinically useful measures that can be employed with PPM as actionable analytical inputs for a dynamic optimization of patient-specific immunosuppression. The investigators will test this hypothesis by developing a prospective quantitative liver allograft monitoring protocol and validate the use of PPM in immunosuppression dosing in liver transplant recipients. This study constitutes the first step in developing and then validating a personalized immunosuppression platform. The mechanism-independent nature of PPM ensures that it will be adaptive and actionable so that it can be applied to diverse sets of patients. The scalability of PPM also ensures that it can be deployed at a scale that can be applied widely to patients receiving care regardless of location.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2023-12-15
Primary completion
2026-10-15
Completion
2026-10-15
First posted
2023-10-02
Last updated
2026-03-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06063213. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.