Search is Powered by Google
Follow us on:
Follow our health news on Twitter
Follow Our News on Facebook
Personalization
login | register
Transplants / Organ Donations News

Pediatric Renal Transplantation Benefits From NIH Grant To Emory And Pediatric Partners

Main Category: Transplants / Organ Donations
Also Included In: Pediatrics / Children's Health;  Urology / Nephrology;  Cardiovascular / Cardiology
Article Date: 11 Mar 2008 - 9:00 PST

email icon email to a friend   printer icon printer friendly   write icon view / write opinions   rate icon rate article
Current Article Ratings:

Patient / Public:not yet rated

Health Professional:not yet rated

Article Opinions: 0 posts

Emory University School of Medicine and Children's Healthcare of Atlanta are teaming up with two university hospitals in California to find new ways to make kidney transplants more tolerable for children.

Emory and Children's will partner with UCLA's Mattel ChildrenÕs Hospital in Los Angeles and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford in Palo Alto for a study of kidney transplants in children.

The National Institutes of Health has awarded the partner institutions a five-year grant totaling approximately $6 million for Clinical Trials in Organ Transplantation in Children (CTOT-C).

In the last decade, doctors have been able to refine the regimens of drugs given to transplant patients. Successful transplantation depends on immunosuppressant drugs to prevent tissue rejection, but the drugs bring multiple side effects such as kidney disease and an increased risk of cardiovascular disease.

"Most anti-rejection drugs were developed in adults and are adapted for children by simply adjusting for weight," says Allan Kirk, MD, PhD, scientific director of the Emory Transplant Center and the study's leader. "But the immune system doesnÕt grow in parallel with a child's weight. The result is that children are often over-immunosuppressed."

Coordinating work among the three university hospitals will allow the study to encompass a group of patients that spans various demographic groups and national origins, says Dr. Kirk, who is a professor of surgery and pediatrics at Emory School of Medicine, a Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar, and an attending surgeon at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta.

As children mature and are gradually exposed to various environmental stresses, such as viral infections, the set of T cells (white blood cells) they have in their bodies that are able to respond to infections or other outside agents changes.

Part of the CTOT-C program will catalog and define how pediatric kidney transplant patients' T cell repertoires evolve as they get older.

The team plans to develop ways to "fingerprint" the pediatric patients' immune systems with information on which genes are turned on and off in their white blood cells. With that information as a diagnostic tool, therapy could be tailored to an individual child at a given point in time, Dr. Kirk says.

"The good news is that outcomes in kidney transplantation have become much more successful in the last couple of decades," says Barry Warshaw, MD, chief of pediatric nephrology at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta and associate professor of pediatrics at Emory. "The bad news is that kidney transplants still don't last a lifetime."

Dr. Warshaw says one of the key aims of the clinical studies will be to develop a simple blood or urine test to inform doctors whether kidney rejection is "revving up," possibly avoiding painful biopsies.

"We're very excited about this grant and expect that it will one day be seen as a landmark in pediatric renal transplantation," he says.

----------------------------
Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
----------------------------

Before coming to Emory in 2007, Dr. Kirk served as chief of the Transplantation Branch at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) of the National Institutes of Health.

His research seeks to achieve immune tolerance of organ and tissue transplants without the use of toxic immunosuppressant drugs. While at the NIH, he served as principal investigator on ten clinical trials leading to advances, including the first trial to investigate a co-stimulation inhibitor in human transplantation and the first trial to investigate the drug alemtuzumab in transplantation in North America.

The Emory Transplant Center and Children's Healthcare of Atlanta perform between 35 and 40 pediatric kidney transplants per year, one of the largest volumes in the United States.

For more information about the Emory Transplant Center, visit http://www.transplant.emory.edu/

For more information about Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, visit http://www.choa.org/

Source: Holly Korschun
Emory University




Personalized Homepage Weekly Newsletters Daily News Alerts
Hemophilia Opioid Induced Constipation Pneumococcal Disease ADHD Anxiety Asthma Atrial Fibrillation Autism Cancer Diabetes Lung Cancer Lupus Medicare / Medicaid Obesity and BMI Pancreatic Cancer Stem Cells All 'What Is...' Articles

Ophthalmology Urology
About Us News Licensing Free Website Feeds Free Tools & Content Tell a Friend Accessibility Help / FAQ Article Submission Links Contact Us

add medical news today to your facebook
medical news gadget

Please fill in our survey

Swine Flu Image

Swine Flu Updates

- Latest Swine Flu News
- What is Swine Flu?
- Map Of H1N1 Outbreaks
- Swine Flu - Top 20 FAQ
- Daily Email News Alerts
Stick with Medical News Today for the latest news updates on swine flu.


These are the most read articles from this news category for the last 6 months:
Top Article Star
Peruvian Gang Killed People To Sell Their Fat Say Police
20 Nov 2009
Police in Peru have arrested four people, three men and a woman, whom they allege are members of a gang suspected of killing up to 60 people in order to extract their body fat to sell for thousands of dollars a litre to...


Keeping Bacteria from Cross Contaminating Your Food
Keeping Bacteria from Cross Contaminating Your Food

Raw meat, poultry and seafood can contain harmful bacteria. To keep them from spreading to other food, it's important to keep raw perishables separate from ready to eat foods.

more videos are available in our health videos section.