Clinical Study

A Pilot Study To Evaluate The Efficacy And Safety Of Budesonide As An Alternative To Prednisone For Liver Transplant Immune Suppression

Posted Date: Jun 13, 2019

  • Investigator: Khurram Bari
  • Specialties:
  • Type of Study: Drug

This is a pilot study that investigates the efficacy and safety of budesonide as an immune suppressing agent for liver transplant recipients in the early post-transplant period. The primary end-point is rates of acute cellular rejection within first 24 weeks post-liver transplant. Secondary end points include rates of new onset diabetes after transplant and safety of budesonide. The study is structured as a prospective clinical trial. After receiving 4 days of intravenous corticosteroids on liver transplant post-operative days 0 through 3, subjects will be started on standard immunosuppression plus enteric coated budesonide (study drug) in place of standard immune suppression plus prednisone (standard of care). Study drug will be tapered over 12 weeks in accordance with the existing standard of care immune suppression protocol. Subjects will be followed in outpatient transplant clinic for 24 weeks. The purpose of the study is to conduct a pilot study to generate rates and effect size that can be used in a subsequent equivalent trial. A total of 20 subjects will be enrolled to receive the standard immunosuppression plus budesonide and their outcomes will be compared to 20 controls receiving standard immunosuppression plus prednisone (standard of care). The use of controls is to generate rate and variability that can be compared with the rate obtained from patients that receive study drug by examining the 95% confidence band.

Criteria:

Adults With Ages 21-75 Years Undergoing First Liver Transplant And No Baseline History Of Diabetes Mellitus

Keywords:

Liver Transplantation, Immune Suppression, Corticosteroids

For More Information:

Khurram Bari
513-558-2898
khurram.bari@uc.edu


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