Open-Labeled Trial Of Zepatier For Treatment Of Hepatitis C-Negative Patients Who Receive Lung Transplants From Hepatitis C-Positive Donors

  • STATUS
    Recruiting
Updated on 19 February 2024

Summary

There has only been a modest increase in the number of lung transplants each year, increasing from a yearly average of 2,400 between 2009 and 2011, to 2,800 in 2016. Despite this, more than 300 patients died or became too sick to transplant on the lung transplant waiting list in 2016. These numbers dont even account for the large population of patients in need of a lung transplant who are never waitlisted because of the scarcity of donor organs relative to the number in need. The opioid epidemic has led to a staggering increase in the number of young, otherwise healthy donors dying of a drug overdose, many of whom are infected with HCV. In 2016, there were 661 HCV-positive donors in the US, of whom 450 had active HCV infection (detectable HCV RNA) at the time of donation. Yet more than 99% of lungs from these donors were discarded.1 Due to the limited supply of donor organs, patients awaiting a lung transplant have to be exceedingly sick, and many times are hospitalized, and sometimes even require mechanical ventilator support, prior to transplantation. This has direct consequences on short-term post-transplant morbidity and mortality. Thus expanding the donor pool could allow for earlier transplantation, which would decrease waitlist mortality while potentially improving post-transplant outcomes. At the very least such a strategy would increase the number of patients who could receive a lifesaving lung transplant. We will perform a pilot trial to prove feasibility of knowingly using HCV-positive organs for HCV-negative recipients, by transplanting at least 10 HCV-negative subjects with lungs from HCV-positive donors, and then treating these subjects with Zepatier in the early post-transplant phase in order to cure their HCV. If any subjects clear HCV spontaneously within the first four weeks post-transplantation, and do not require treatment, subjects will be added until there have been 10 HCV-negative subjects who receive a lung transplant from an HCV-positive donor, develop HCV, and are then treated for their HCV with Zepatier.

Details
Condition Lung Diseases
Age 99years or below
Clinical Study Identifier03724149
Last Modified on19 February 2024

Eligibility

How to participate?

Step 1 Connect with a study center
Message sent successfully.
We have submitted the information you provided to the research team at the location you chose. For your records, we have sent a copy of the message to your email address.
If you would like to be informed of other studies that may be of interest to you, you may sign up for Patient Notification Service.
Sign up

Send a message

Enter your contact details to connect with study team

Investigator Avatar

Primary Contact

First name*
Last name*
Email*
Phone number*
Preferred way of contact
Race
Ethnicity
Other language

Additional screening procedures may be conducted by the study team before you can be confirmed eligible to participate.

Learn more

If you are confirmed eligible after full screening, you will be required to understand and sign the informed consent if you decide to enroll in the study. Once enrolled you may be asked to make scheduled visits over a period of time.

Learn more

Complete your scheduled study participation activities and then you are done. You may receive summary of study results if provided by the sponsor.

Learn more

Similar trials to consider

Loading...

Not finding what you're looking for?

Every year hundreds of thousands of volunteers step forward to participate in research. Sign up as a volunteer and receive email notifications when clinical trials are posted in the medical category of interest to you.

Sign up as volunteer
Add a private note
  • abc Select a piece of text.
  • Add notes visible only to you.
  • Send it to people through a passcode protected link.