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Pancreas Transplant Program: Research
The Nebraska Medical Center participates in a variety of clinical trials to test new, investigational drugs or to study new ways of using known treatments. By researching the latest and most innovative transplant procedures and therapies, we can provide patients access to the newest treatments. Once a patient has been evaluated and approved for transplant they may be eligible for participation in a clinical trial.

 

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Patients who are eligible to participate in a clinical trial have the opportunity to review the study protocol to determine what is expected. The protocol will list details including the schedule of tests, procedures, medications, dosages, schedule of doctor appointments and the duration of the study. Choosing to enroll is a personal decision that requires careful consideration of the potential advantages and disadvantages of participation. If you chose to enroll in the study, you will be asked to sign an informed consent document. This document is not a contract and you may withdraw at any time. The following describes an investigational program the kidney transplant program participates in to help advance transplantation success.

Clinical Trials

Early Steroid Withdrawal Study verses Long-Term Use of Steroids in Primary Kidney Transplants (Multi-Center Trial)
Patients who qualify and consent to this study are randomized to Simulect induction, Prograf, and Cellcept with steroids verses Simulect induction, Prograf, and Cellcept without steroids. Post transplant rejection rates as well as long-term complications from steroid use and non-steroid use are studied in these groups of patients.

FTY720 Study
The goal of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of a new anti-rejection medication, FTY720, in combination reduced-dose or full- dose Neoral and steroids versus mycophenolate mofetil (Cellcept, MMF) combined with full-dose Neoral and steroids in adult kidney transplant recipients.

Optima Study
Consenting patients with previous kidney transplants for at least six months and are on Neoral as an anti-rejection agent, are converted from Neoral to Prograf to optimize Prograf therapy in maintaining kidney transplants over the long term.

TAILOR (Thymoglobulin antibody immunosuppression in living donor recipients
Consenting patients undergoing living donor kidney transplant are evaluated in the use of an anti-rejection agent, Thymoglobulin, given at the time of the transplant.

Islet Cell Transplantation
Individuals with insulin dependent diabetes mellitus may be eligible for islet cell transplantation. Islet cells that are isolated from a donor pancreas, are infused into the recipient’s liver for the purposes of producing insulin. Islet cell transplant is an alternative to whole organ pancreas transplant to produce insulin, regulate blood sugars and stabilize diabetic complications.

A Registry of Long-Term Outcomes in Kidney and/or Pancreas Transplant Recipients
A registry has been established of patients who have had a kidney and or pancreas transplant in our program and who have consented to the release of their medical information for the purposes of studying long-term outcomes and complications after transplant.

Steroid-Free Immunosuppression in Recipients of Kidney Transplants
The steroid-free anti-rejection study in patients who have had a kidney transplant (and consented to the study) is a three-year study to monitor outcomes in patients who are being managed post transplant without the use of steroids. This study was initiated in 2002.

Thymoglobulin Induction Therapy for Renal Transplants
The Thymoglobulin Induction study purpose is to evaluate the use of Thymoglobulin in a single dose after transplant as opposed to the alternate day administration. Patients who meet criteria and who consent to the study will be randomized to either a single dose of thymoglobulin or alternate day thymoglobulin.

 

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