Chronic allograft rejection of the transplanted lung (CLAD) is a major health issue in patients after lung transplant. This study is a registry-forming study with concurrent tissue banking from surveillance bronchoscopy in addition to extra tissue sampling of blood and urine. Patients will be characterized by usual clinical phenotyping and the latest imaging methods so that diseased condition underlying CLAD can be better understood.
Chronic allograft rejection of the transplanted lung (CLAD) is a major health issue that lead to almost 50% mortality within 5 years from the time of lung transplant. In the past CLAD was exclusively occurring in small airways causing a condition called "Bronchiolitis Obliteran Syndrome" (BOS). However, recently many have observed restrictive changes in lung physiology with or without parenchymal abnormalities. This new CLAD is called RAS or RCLAD. What is also concerning is that RAS is thought to be associated with disproportionally high morbidity and mortality. This clinical trial intends to create a registry of patients who completed lung transplant and who are undergoing routine surveillance bronchoscopy. A subgroup of patients will be characterized by hyper polarized gas magnetic resonance image to enhance detection of CLAD, and to be correlated between the MRI imaging results and clinical/biochemical results. This study is anticipated to advance our understanding of CLAD which is currently inevitably fatal outcome among patients after lung transplant.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
1,200
Patients who received lung transplant and undergoing surveillance follow-up at 1, 3, 6, 12, 24 months after the date of lung transplant, but without consenting to be evaluated by hyperbolized gas MRI. Bronchoscopy sampling will be performed per usual lung transplant team protocol.
Patients who received lung transplant and undergoing surveillance follow-up at 1, 3, 6, 12, 24 months after the date of lung transplant and with consenting to be evaluated by hyperbolized has MRI. Bronchoscopy sampling will be guided by the results of the hyper polarized gas MRI, different from the usual lung transplant team protocol. Administration of hyper polarized gas MRI is under FDA regulation by IND #129769 (PI, Yun Michael Shim, MD)
University of Virginia Health System
Charlottesville, Virginia, United States
Successful collection of all samples as proposed.
Completion of surveillance bronchoscopy and other tissue collection at planned surveillance (24 months after the date of lung transplant surgery)
Time frame: 24 months after the date of lung transplant surgery
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