Multicenter, Phase 1/2 Pilot Study of Safety and Efficacy Assessment of Tegoprubart and Calcineurin Inhibitors- Free Immunosuppression Therapy for Pancreatic Islet Transplantation in Patients With T1DM and Chronic Kidney Disease
University of Chicago
Summary
Single arm- subject treated with Tegoprubart and everolimus. The purpose of this research is to gather information on the safety and effectiveness of investigational regimen containing 2 experimental components: * An investigational drug called Tegoprubart and * Human pancreatic islet cells Both Tegoprubart and human pancreatic islet cells are considered investigational because they are not approved for use in the United States by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Participation in this research will last about 5 years. Assess safety, tolerability, and efficacy of transplanted islet cells and immunomodulation with Tegoprubart in combination with anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG), etanercept and with everolimus in adults with brittle T1D and chronic kidney disease (stage 2-3a).
Description
This study is funded by Breakthrough T1D (formerly the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation) and Emerald Clinical Trials will be acting as the clinical research organization (CRO) for this study, overseeing data integrity, compliance and monitoring clinical trial activity. They will help with development of all regulatory and fully supporting University of Miami. Islet cells are the specialized cells in the pancreas that produce insulin. In this study, islet cells will be collected from the pancreas of a deceased organ donor in a special laboratory at University of Chicago and then transplan…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18–70 years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Participants are eligible for consideration for the study only if all of the following criteria apply at the time of screening Inclusion: 1. Subjects 18-70 years of age. 2. A diagnosis of T1D ≥5 years with onset of disease at \<40 years of age. 3. Ability to provide informed consent. 4. Able to comply with study procedures, including the requirement to utilize continuous glucose monitoring (CGM). 5. Involvement in appropriate diabetes management in accordance with the standard of care, using an insulin pump or multiple daily injection (MDI) insulin therapy and, unable to achieve acceptable me…
Interventions
- DrugTegoprubart
Tegoprubart is a monoclonal antibody. Antibodies are Y-shaped proteins that are produced naturally by the immune system to attack and fight foreign substances that cause illness. Monoclonal antibodies are man-made proteins manufactured to serve as substitute antibodies to fight diseases. Monoclonal antibodies can restore, enhance, or mimic (copy) the immune system's attack process; they can also tone down the immune system. Tegoprubart is thought to work by dampening down our immune system so that it will be less likely to attack the transplanted cells. For other types of transplants, like kidneys, a drug called a calcineurin inhibitor is usually used to prevent rejection. That class of drugs can be toxic to islet cells. Tegoprubart is an experimental agent that is anticipated to prevent rejection without harming the islet cells. This study will test this hypothesis.
- BiologicalIslet Cell Transplant
Human pancreatic islet cells is considered investigational because it is not approved for use in the United States by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Participation in this research will last about 5 years. The islet transplant procedure involves inserting a thin, flexible tube called a catheter through a small cut in the upper abdomen. A radiologist uses x-rays and ultrasound to guide the catheter into the portal vein of the liver where the islet cells are delivered. This study of islet transplantation will test to see if islet transplantation is safe and effective; performing this study will help us find if this new medication Tegoprubart, combined with either MPA or everolimus and other medication the investigators have been using routinely so far, would protect sufficiently islet transplant from the destruction by the immune system, allowing participants to stop insulin and have improved blood glucose control.
Location
- The University of ChicagoChicago, Illinois