In this study, individuals without hepatitis C infection who are on the kidney transplant waitlist will receive a kidney from a deceased donor with hepatitis C infection and will be treated for hepatitis C at the same time. Treatment will include glecaprevir 300 mg / pibrentasvir 120 mg (G-P) administered on-call to the operating room for the renal transplant procedure and continued for 2 weeks post-renal transplant.
In this study, individuals without hepatitis C infection who are on the kidney transplant waitlist will receive a kidney from a deceased donor with hepatitis C infection and will be treated for hepatitis C at the same time. Treatment will include glecaprevir 300 mg / pibrentasvir 120 mg (G-P) administered on-call to the operating room for the renal transplant procedure and continued for 2 weeks post-renal transplant. The participant will continue to be tested for Hepatitis C for 12 weeks post-treatment. The primary hypothesis is that prophylactic treatment with glecaprevir/pibrentasvir before and after transplant will prevent the establishment of HCV infection in the recipients of kidneys from HCV-infected deceased donors. Based on the success of preliminary studies, the objective of the study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of 2 weeks of G-P as prophylaxis for HCV D+/R- kidney transplant.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
10
Glecaprevir/pibrentasvir 300mg/120mg once daily by mouth for 2 weeks post-transplant.
Johns Hopkins Hospital
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Viral Response as Assessed by Number of Participants With Undetectable Hepatitis C RNA
This is the number of participants with undetectable hepatitis C RNA in the blood at 12 weeks after stopping treatment (Number of kidney transplant recipients with HCV RNA \< Lower Limit Of Quantification (LLOQ)).
Time frame: 12 weeks after completing therapy
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