Post-transplant long-term care

Displaying 6 studies

  • Study of Sexuality and Quality of Life in Solid Organ Transplant Recipients Scottsdale/Phoenix, AZ

    The purpose of this study is to study the sexuality and quality of life (QOL) gap in post-transplant patient care and develop an action plan addressing both the gaps in research and clinical care of this group of patients.

  • A Study to Evaluate Patient Outcomes From the Kidney Allograft Outcomes AlloSure® Registry (KOAR) Jacksonville, FL

    The purpose of this study is to evaluate safety and efficacy outcomes in renal transplant recipients in whom post-transplant care is managed using AlloSure®. AlloSure® is a non-invasive test to measure donor-derived cell-free DNA (dd-cfDNA). The AlloSure test is intended to assess the probability of allograft rejection in kidney transplant recipients with clinical suspicion of rejection and to inform clinical decision-making regarding the necessity of renal biopsy in such patients at least 2 weeks post-transplant in conjunction with standard clinical assessment. Amendment 1 (A1): Is an observational study to develop and validate the clinical use of KidneyCare®.

  • Mediterranean Diet Post-liver Transplantation Rochester, MN

    The purposes of this study are to prospectively evaluate the effects of a structured, modified Mediterranean diet on post-liver transplant weight gain and development of PTMS, to prospectively evaluate the effects of a structured, modified Mediterranean diet on cardiovascular outcomes post-liver transplantation, and to prospectively evaluate the effects of a structured, modified Mediterranean diet on development or recurrence or de novo NAFLD/NASH in liver-transplant patients.

  • A Study to Evaluate Kidney Care and HistoMap in Microvascular Inflammation Scottsdale/Phoenix, AZ

    The purpose of this study is to evaluate KidneyCare (AlloSure, AlloMap kidney and iBox) in patients with negative c4d microvascular inflammation (MVI) with or without Donor-Specific Antibodies (DSA) as compared to cohort with normal biopsies without DSA.

  • Executive Function, Cognitive Impairment, Illness Perceptions, and Medication Adherence Among Heart Transplant Recipients Scottsdale/Phoenix, AZ

    Nonadherence to immunosuppression is associated with an increased risk for organ rejection, allograft vasculopathy, and death (De Geest et al., 2014). Immunosuppression nonadherence has been found to be a factor in up to 90% of late acute rejection events that occur after the first year following transplant, and in 13% to 26% of deaths among heart transplant recipients in single-center research studies (De Geest et al., 2005). A prospective cohort study found that for individuals who were nonadherent after their first year following transplant, the risk of a negative clinical event was doubled (Dobbels et al., 2004). In ...

  • Development of Non-invasive Cell-free DNA to Supplant Invasive Biopsy in Heart Transplantation Jacksonville, FL

    The purpose of this study is to describe the association between Prospera dd-cfDNA measures and other diagnostic tests used to detect heart allograft rejection and/or njury, including histology, echocardiography and DSA, in the first post-transplant year. Additionally, to inform rates of clinical outcomes in a contemporary cohort of adult heart transplant recipients to determine power for a future randomized, controlled clinical trial.

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