Prevent Allosensitization in Patients Who Have Failed a First Renal Transplant (PART)

NANot yet recruitingINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

96

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

January 31, 2025

Primary Completion Date

December 31, 2027

Study Completion Date

December 31, 2027

Conditions
Kidney TransplantKidney Transplant FailureImmunosuppresion
Interventions
DRUG

Prevention of Allosensitization

This study evaluates the impact of two different durations of immunosuppressive therapy on kidney transplant patients who return to dialysis after a failed transplant. One group will continue immunosuppressive therapy for two years, while the other will stop the therapy six months after starting dialysis. The goal is to determine if continuing immunosuppression can reduce the risk of allosensitization and improve outcomes, compared to stopping the therapy earlier.

Trial Locations (1)

V6Z1Y6

Kidney Transplant Research, Vancouver

All Listed Sponsors
collaborator

Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)

OTHER_GOV

lead

University of British Columbia

OTHER

NCT06802822 - Prevent Allosensitization in Patients Who Have Failed a First Renal Transplant (PART) | Biotech Hunter | Biotech Hunter