Kidney Transplants Available To HIV-Positive Patients
September 5, 2002
Contact: Timothy S. McCoy mccoy@umbi.umd.edu
410-706-1954
Those with AIDS virus now can be added to waiting list for life-saving procedure
HIV-positive patients may be eligible for kidney transplants despite the fact
they have the virus that causes AIDS. Due to therapeutic advances in HIV/AIDS
care, those with the AIDS virus now can be considered as candidates for a multi-center
five-year clinical trial evaluating the safety and effectiveness of this life-saving
procedure in HIV-infected patients.
"Until recently, people with HIV infection have not been considered as
eligible candidates for this procedure due to concerns that the immune system
suppression required for organ transplantation might worsen the patient's HIV
infection and, potentially, be fatal," says Dr. Robert Redfield, director
of the Clinical Care & Research Division of the Institute of Human Virology
in Baltimore, Md.
"With the advent of combination therapies, however, HIV-infected patients
are living healthier and longer lives. A growing number, in fact, are dying
from consequences of end stage kidney and liver disease rather than AIDS-related
infections and tumors. Due to the therapeutic advances in treatment of HIV infection,
these same patients may now be better candidates for a kidney transplant,"
Dr. Redfield adds.
Despite the fact that HIV-positive patients historically could not be considered
eligible for solid organ transplant, some had undergone this life-saving procedure
before being diagnosed with the virus that causes AIDS. Their experiences provided
pilot data that paved the way for the current clinical trial being conducted
jointly by the Institute of Human Virology and the University of Maryland Medical
Center.
This study, funded by the National Institutes of Health, will evaluate whether
post-transplant medications used to prevent the body from rejecting the new
kidney negatively affect HIV infection; whether HIV infection negatively affects
the transplanted kidney; and how antiretrovirals (drugs used to treat HIV) and
the anti-rejection drugs interact with each other.
Approximately 75 patients will be enrolled nationwide; one-third of them at
the University of Maryland Medical Center, with which the IHV is affiliated,
and which performs more kidney transplants than any other center in the United
States.
Dr. Stephen T. Bartlett, co-principal investigator for the study, head of the
University of Maryland Medical Center's Division of Transplantation Surgery
and professor of surgery at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, has
been a pioneer in the development of new treatment strategies for patient populations
previously denied transplantation. The Maryland transplant team also has pioneered
minimally invasive surgery for kidney donation by living donors, potentially
a significant benefit for those study participants who have identified a living
donor. This study, evaluating how to best manage HIV-infected patients who undergo
kidney transplantation, will utilize kidneys both from living donors and cadavers.
Eligibility requirements include documented HIV infection (by any licensed
ELISA and confirmation by the Western Blot), current CD4+ T-cell counts at or
above 200/mL for the past six months, HIV-1 RNA less than 50 copies/mL for three
months. Patients must meet standard listing criteria for placement on a transplant
waiting list and must be able to provide informed consent and participate in
close clinical follow-up for blood tests and various examinations over a five-year
period of time.
"Findings presented just last week at the International Congress of the
Transplantation Society meeting indicate that HIV-positive patients are just
as likely to survive solid organ transplantation as other transplant recipients.
And the waiting list has been growing for years," says Dr. Redfield, who
adds that more than 25 patients already are on a waiting list at the Institute
of Human Virology. Further testing could help solidify preliminary data, he
adds, and validate insurance coverage for the life-saving procedure, which averages
approximately $75,000 per transplant.
Other participating centers include the University of California - San Francisco,
Cornell University, Duke University, Georgetown University, Mount Sinai School
of Medicine, University of Minnesota, University of Pittsburgh, University of
Virginia and Washington Hospital Center.
Those interested in the IHV/UMMC clinical trial can contact 410-706-1476 or
410-706-1684.
Related Information on IHV.org
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The Institute of Human Virology (IHV) is a center of the University of Maryland
Biotechnology Institute and affiliated with University of Maryland Medicine.
It was established to create and develop a world-class center of excellence
focusing on chronic viral diseases and virally linked cancers. The IHV is dedicated
to discovery, research, treatment, and prevention of these diseases and cancers.
Its unique structure seeks to connect cohesive, multidisciplinary research and
clinical programs so that new treatments are streamlined from discovery to patient.
The IHV serves patients locally and the scientific community globally. The Institute
of Human Virology was formed in 1996 as a partnership between the State of Maryland,
the City of Baltimore, the University System of Maryland, and the University
of Maryland Medical System.
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