A Randomized Trial Comparing Imlifidase to Plasmapheresis in Kidney Transplant Recipients With Antibody‐Mediated Rejection

Author:

Halleck Fabian12ORCID,Böhmig Georg A.3ORCID,Couzi Lionel45ORCID,Rostaing Lionel6ORCID,Einecke Gunilla78ORCID,Lefaucheur Carmen9,Legendre Christophe1011ORCID,Montgomery Robert12ORCID,Hughes Peter1314ORCID,Chandraker Anil15,Wyburn Kate16,Halloran Phil17ORCID,Maldonado Angela Q.18ORCID,Sjöholm Kristoffer18ORCID,Runström Anna18ORCID,Lefèvre Paola18,Tollemar Jan18,Jordan Stanley19ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nephrology and Medical Intensive Care Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin Berlin Germany

2. Freie Universität Berlin and Humboldt‐Universität zu Berlin Berlin Germany

3. Division of Nephrology and Dialysis Department of Medicine III Medical University of Vienna Vienna Austria

4. Department of Nephrology Transplantation, Dialysis and Apheresis Bordeaux University Hospital Bordeaux France

5. CNRS‐UMR 5164 ImmunoConcEpT Bordeaux University Bordeaux France

6. Department of Néphrology Hemodialysis, Apheresis and Kidney Transplantation CHU Grenoble‐Alpes Grenoble France

7. Medizinische Hochschule Hannover Germany

8. Universitätsmedizin Göttingen Göttingen Germany

9. Department of Kidney Transplantation Saint‐Louis Hospital Assistance Publique ‐ Hôpitaux de Paris Paris France

10. Hôpital Necker Paris France

11. Université Paris Cité Paris France

12. New York University Langone Health New York New York USA

13. Department of Nephrology The Royal Melbourne Hospital Melbourne Australia

14. Faculty of Medicine Dentistry and Health Science The University of Melbourne Melbourne Australia

15. Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

16. Royal Prince Alfred Hospital Sydney Australia

17. University of Alberta Edmonton Canada

18. Hansa Biopharma Lund Sweden

19. Cedars‐Sinai Medical Center Los Angeles California USA

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundAntibody‐mediated rejection (ABMR) poses a barrier to long‐term graft survival and is one of the most challenging events after kidney transplantation. Removing donor specific antibodies (DSA) through therapeutic plasma exchange (PLEX) is a cornerstone of antibody depletion but has inconsistent effects. Imlifidase is a treatment currently utilized for desensitization with near‐complete inactivation of DSA both in the intra‐ and extravascular space.MethodsThis was a 6‐month, randomized, open‐label, multicenter, multinational trial conducted at 14 transplant centers. Thirty patients were randomized to either imlifidase or PLEX treatment. The primary endpoint was reduction in DSA level during the 5 days following the start of treatment.ResultsDespite considerable heterogeneity in the trial population, DSA reduction as defined by the primary endpoint was 97% for imlifidase compared to 42% for PLEX. Additionally, imlifidase reduced DSA to noncomplement fixing levels, whereas PLEX failed to do so. After antibody rebound in the imlifidase arm (circa days 6–12), both arms had similar reductions in DSA. Five allograft losses occurred during the 6 months following the start of ABMR treatment—four within the imlifidase arm (18 patients treated) and one in the PLEX arm (10 patients treated). In terms of clinical efficacy, the Kaplan–Meier estimated graft survival was 78% for imlifidase and 89% for PLEX, with a slightly higher eGFR in the PLEX arm at the end of the trial. The observed adverse events in the trial were as expected, and there were no apparent differences between the arms.ConclusionImlifidase was safe and well‐tolerated in the ABMR population. Despite meeting the primary endpoint of maximum DSA reduction compared to PLEX, the trial was unsuccessful in demonstrating a clinical benefit of imlifidase in this heterogenous ABMR population.Trial RegistrationEudraCT number: 2018‐000022‐66, 2020‐004777‐49; ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03897205, NCT04711850

Publisher

Wiley

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