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The Hepatitis C Transplant Collaborative

NCT04493385 · Baylor Research Institute
In plain English

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Official title
Nationwide Hepatitis C NAT+ Cardiac Transplant Experience
About this study
Organ offers from donors with prior or chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) exposure have been historically underutilized for orthotopic heart transplantation because of the post-transplantation risks \[1, 2\]. The use of HCV antibody-positive (Ab+) donors was associated with attenuated survival benefit after heart transplant and increased coronary allograft vasculopathy in the era before new highly effective direct-acting antiviral agents (DAAs) were developed \[3-5\]. These DAAs target multiple steps in the HCV replication life cycle \[6\]. Newer, well-tolerated, oral direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) have recently been transforming thoracic transplant outcomes after donor-derived HCV transmission. Moreover, now that HCV nucleic-acid testing (NAT), a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based approach to detecting viral activity, is widely available and used on all US donor organs, transplant centers have more relevant information about the donor, allowing better risk assessments. As a result, the utilization of HCV NAT+ donor hearts for transplantation is rapidly gaining momentum, with the obvious benefits of an enlarged donor pool \[7\]. Appropriately, clinical safety trials are currently underway, including a multicenter effort led by the PI of this proposal. Moreover, since the last \~2 years many transplant centers across the nation have started transplanting HCV NAT+ donor organs as standard of care. We estimate that the number of HCV+ cardiac transplants is quickly outpacing the number of trial participants. Hence, it is imperative that safety assessments and risk analyses 'catch up with the real world'.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria: 1. Recipient of a proven HCV NAT+ donor heart. 2. Re-transplant patients will be included. Exclusion Criteria: 1\. Multi-organ transplantation
Study design
Enrollment target: 500 participants
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2019-09-16
Estimated completion: 2030-12
Last updated: 2026-01-22
Primary outcomes
  • Number of donor HCV nucleic-acid testing positive (HCV NAT+) cardiac transplantation (6.5 years)
  • Failure versus Cure Rate for HCV NAT+ Heart Transplants (6.5 years)
  • Rate of Primary graft dysfunction (PGD) (30 days)
Sponsor
Baylor Research Institute · other
Contacts & investigators
ContactJoost Felius, PhD · contact · Joost.Felius@BSWHEALTH.ORG · 214-818-8943
InvestigatorShelley A Hall, MD FACC · principal_investigator, BSWRI
All locations (1)
Baylor Scott & White Health Research InstituteRecruiting
Dallas, Texas, United States
The Hepatitis C Transplant Collaborative · TrialPath