Official Title

Prevention of Skin Cancer in High Risk Patients After Conversion to a Sirolimus-based Immunosuppressive Protocol
  • Phase

    Phase 4
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Terminated
  • Intervention/Treatment

    sirolimus ...
  • Study Participants

    40
Transplant recipients have a high risk to develop skin malignancies. This effect depends on the one hand on the immunosuppressive drugs themselves and relates on the other hand on the dosage. Based on the encouraging results of previous, retrospective studies on patients treated with Sirolimus (SRL), these patients should be switched to an immunosuppressive regime including SRL, decreasing the dosage of calcineurin-inhibitors or converting from former immunosuppression. A conversion to a SRL-based therapy is effective in immunosuppression and safe regarding graft and patient survival.

This study was designed to assess whether a switch to a SRL-immunosuppressive therapy decreases the incidence/reoccurrence of skin neoplasm.
Study Started
Mar 31
2007
Primary Completion
Apr 30
2011
Study Completion
Jun 30
2013
Last Update
May 04
2017

Drug Sirolimus

  • Other names: Rapamune®

Sirolimus Active Comparator

Patients who meet all inclusion criteria will be included into the study and randomised. If converted to Sirolimus (SRL), patients will take SRL according to the investigator's instructions and medication label, once daily preferably 4 hours after calcineurin-inhibitor medication or in case without calcineurin-inhibitor co-medication in the morning. The dose of SRL will be correlated to the former immunosuppressive therapy according to the study's conversion protocol.

Standard therapy No Intervention

Patients who will not receive SRL stay on their previous immunosuppressive therapy including one or more of the following drugs: azathioprine, cyclosporine, tacrolimus, mycophenolate-sodium and steroids.

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Recipients of renal allograft with current actinic keratosis I or II or successfully treated actinic keratosis III (inclusion possible immediately after completed wound healing from surgical excision), invasive squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), basal cell carcinoma
age 18 years and older
minimum period of 6 month after renal transplantation
stable renal function and a calculated creatinine clearance of at least 40 ml/min
written informed consent
proteinuria ≤ 800 mg/d at time of enrolment
successfully treated solid tumor (no recurrence or metastasis in the last 2 years)

Exclusion Criteria:

Current Sirolimus- or Everolimus- intake
Instable graft function (creatinine clearance < 40 ml/min)
Graft rejection within the 3 previous months
Proteinuria > 800 mg/d
Non-controlled hyperlipidemia (Cholesterol >7,8 mmol/l (300 mg/dl), Triglycerides > 4 mmol/l (350 mg/dl)
Leucopenia < 2500/nl
Thrombocytopenia < 90/nl
Pregnancy or breastfeeding
Women of childbearing age without highly effective contraception
Known allergy to macrolides
Current participation in other studies
Refusal to sign informed consent form
Neoplasm other than defined as inclusion criteria
All contraindications to SRL (see package insert, appendix)
Persons who are detained officially or legally to an official institute
Acute infections (mycotic, viral or bacterial)
Current intake of other substances with known nephrotoxicity
Severe liver dysfunction
Current intake of CY3A4-inhibitors (e.g. ketoconazole, voriconazole, itraconazole, telithromycin or clarithromycin) or CY3A4-inductors (rifampicin, rifabutin)
sucrose-isomaltase deficiency, fructose intolerance, glucose-galactose intolerance
azathioprine: known allergy to azathioprine or 6-mercaptopurine, severe bone marrow dysfunction, pancreatitis, vaccination with live vaccine
tacrolimus: known allergy to tacrolimus
mycophenolatmofetil: known allergy to mycophenolatmofetil, neutropenia, severe active gastrointestinal tract disease, Lesch-Nyhan syndrome or Kelley-Seegmiller syndrome, current intake of azathioprine
cyclosporine: known allergy to cyclosporine, increased intracranial pressure
No Results Posted