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ANN
ARBOR, Mich. -- The first test in humans of a bioartificial
kidney offers hope of the device's potential to save
the lives of people with acute renal failure, researchers
at the University of Michigan Health System report.
While the phase I/II study was designed primarily
to look at the safety of using this device on humans,
the results also suggest improvement in kidney function.
The patients enrolled in the trial faced an average
86 percent likelihood of dying at the hospital. Six
of those 10 patients survived more than 30 days after
treatment with the bioartificial kidney. The study
appears in the October issue of the journal Kidney
International.
"These results showed
this type of human adult progenitor/stem cell is well-tolerated
by patients with acute renal failure, and resulted
in some improvement of the patients' clinical conditions.
It's a small study but it was compelling enough for
us and the FDA to go forward with a full phase II
study," says lead study author H. David Humes,
M.D., professor of Internal Medicine at the U-M Medical
School. Humes developed the renal tubule assist device,
or RAD, the cell cartridge that is key to the bioartificial
kidney.
The RAD is being developed
for future commercial applications under license to
Nephros Therapeutics Inc.
The phase I/II study enrolled
10 patients at UMHS and the Cleveland Clinic Foundation.
Patients were seriously ill, with acute renal failure
and multiple other illnesses, including sepsis, multiple
organ failure, acute respiratory distress syndrome
and postoperative complications.
Each patient received up to
24 hours of treatment with the renal tubule assist
device. Several patients were taken off the treatment
earlier because of reactions such as hypoglycemia
or low platelet counts, or because of complications
related to their other medical conditions.
The bioartificial kidney includes
a cartridge that filters the blood as in traditional
kidney dialysis. That cartridge is connected to a
renal tubule assist device, which is made of hollow
fibers lined with a type of kidney cell called renal
proximal tubule cells. These cells are intended to
reclaim vital electrolytes, salt, glucose and water,
as well as control production of immune system molecules
called cytokines, which the body needs to fight infection.
Conventional kidney dialysis
machines remove these important components of blood
plasma, along with toxic waste products, and cannot
provide the cytokine regulation function of living
cells. Traditional therapy for patients with acute
or chronic renal failure involves dialysis or kidney
transplant, both of which have limitations.
Humes and his colleagues began
developing this technology a decade ago, identifying
the adult progenitor/stem cells and testing the device
in animals. Initial testing in animals, published
in the journal Nature Biotechnology in April 1999,
found the cells in the RAD perform the metabolic and
hormonal functions lost in acute renal failure.
Eventually, researchers hope
the device can become implantable in patients with
chronic renal failure as a long-term replacement for
kidney function. More testing is needed before that
can become a reality, and any standard use of this
therapy is still many years off.
"The long-term goal, if
this shows effectiveness in patients with end stage
renal disease, is to build a fully implantable device.
Our lab is working with engineers at U-M and the Cleveland
Clinic to make nanofabricated membranes that can miniaturize
the device so it can be implanted and fully replace
organ function," Humes says.
For now, a randomized, controlled
phase II trial of the RAD in acute renal failure is
currently underway at six academic medical centers
under investigational new drug, sponsored by Nephros
Therapeutics Inc. The study is expected to expand
to additional centers later this year. UMHS researchers
also have planned, for late 2005, a phase I/II trial
to investigate the safety of the RAD for people with
end-stage chronic renal failure. Investigators are
not looking for volunteers for that trial, and the
device is not ready to be implanted in patients.
In addition to Humes, U-M study
authors were William Weitzel, M.D., assistant professor
of Nephrology; Robert Bartlett, M.D., professor of
Surgery; and Fresca Swaniker, M.D., assistant professor
of Surgery. Other authors were Emil Paganini, M.D.,
of the Cleveland Clinic, and Jack Luderer, M.D., and
Joseph Sobota, M.D., of Nephros Therapeutics.
Funding for the study was from the National Institutes
of Health, the Michigan Life Sciences Corridor Fund
and Nephros Therapeutics. The renal assist device
technology is owned by the University of Michigan
and licensed to Nephros Therapeutics Inc., a biotechnology
spinout company of U-M. Humes, Luderer and Sobota
are shareholders in Nephros.
Patients
seeking more information about the renal assist device
can call( USA ) 800-742-2300, category 6500.
Reference:
Kidney International, Vol. 66, No. 4, pp. 1578-1588
Nicole Fawcett
nfawcett@umich.edu
734-764-2220
Kara Gavin
kegavin@umich.edu
734-764-2220
University of Michigan Health
System
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