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REmote preconditioning for Protection Against Ischaemia–Reperfusion in renal transplantation (REPAIR): a multicentre, multinational, double-blind, factorial designed randomised controlled trial

REmote preconditioning for Protection Against Ischaemia–Reperfusion in renal transplantation (REPAIR): a multicentre, multinational, double-blind, factorial designed randomised controlled trial
REmote preconditioning for Protection Against Ischaemia–Reperfusion in renal transplantation (REPAIR): a multicentre, multinational, double-blind, factorial designed randomised controlled trial
Background
Long-term kidney allograft survival has remained unchanged in recent years despite immunosuppressive and surgical advances. Ischaemia–reperfusion (IR) injury sustained at transplantation contributes to kidney damage that limits allograft lifespan. Interventions to reduce IR injury may prolong graft life, delaying the need for a return to dialysis. Remote ischaemic preconditioning (RIPC), in which brief episodes of non-lethal ischaemia applied to the limb activate a systemic protective reflex against subsequent damaging IR injury, has been reported to cause cardiac, renal and neurological protection in small-scale trials.
Objectives
The REmote preconditioning for Protection Against Ischaemia–Reperfusion in renal transplantation (REPAIR) trial investigated whether RIPC improves kidney function and other outcomes following living-donor renal transplantation.
Design
Multicentre, multinational, double-blind, 2 × 2 factorial designed randomised controlled trial.
Setting
Thirteen tertiary care hospitals in the UK, the Netherlands, Belgium and France.
Participants
The REPAIR trial recruited 406 live donor–recipient pairs aged ≥ 18 years. Patients on adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-sensitive potassium channel opening or blocking drugs, on ciclosporin, with a known iodine sensitivity or with ABO incompatibility or those requiring human leucocyte antigen (HLA) antibody removal therapy were excluded.
Interventions
Each pair was randomised using a factorial design to one of four groups: sham RIPC, early RIPC (immediately before surgery), late RIPC (24 hours before surgery) and dual RIPC (early and late RIPC). The donor and recipient received the same intervention (active RIPC or sham RIPC) at the two time points.
Main outcome measures
The primary outcome was glomerular filtration rate (GFR) 12 months after transplantation measured by iohexol clearance. Important secondary outcomes were estimated GFR (eGFR) (using routine clinical assessment), safety, inflammatory cytokine profile and biological mechanisms.
Results
In total, 406 donor–recipient pairs were randomised: 99 to sham RIPC, 102 to early RIPC, 103 to late RIPC and 102 to dual RIPC. Early RIPC resulted in a small but clinically important increase in iohexol GFR (ml/minute/1.73 m2) at 12 months, although the evidence is weak [58.3 vs. 55.9; adjusted difference 3.08, 95% confidence interval (CI) –0.89 to 7.04; p = 0.13], likely because of the higher than expected variability in the iohexol measurements. There was stronger evidence for a treatment effect when eGFR was used and missing values imputed (adjusted difference 3.41, 95% CI –0.21 to 7.04; p = 0.065) and when eGFR was used to assess kidney function (adjusted difference 4.98, 95% CI 1.13 to 8.29; p = 0.011). Late RIPC had no effect on renal outcomes, there was no benefit of combining early and late RIPC and RIPC had no effect on the inflammatory response to surgery. RIPC was safe and well tolerated by recipients and donors.
Conclusions
RIPC is a safe intervention in living-donor transplantation. The evidence for an effect of RIPC on GFR (primary outcome) was weak, but other measures of GFR (in our secondary analysis) provided persuasive evidence of a clinically meaningful improvement in kidney function after transplantation. Future work should investigate the role of RIPC in deceased-donor kidney transplantation.
National Institute for Health Research
MacAllister, R
9f4b26b2-72e1-4ccf-9338-362d6193085b
Clayton, T
df1b7003-688f-4814-b0c3-77d4d8d371da
Knight, R
72648411-42d9-4812-a669-f42351041866
Robertson, S
b02cb9cc-b506-4783-8186-3b36511a2d68
Nicholas, J
aed57b9f-7c12-41db-ae46-4e16e66aacfb
Motwani, M
d791ea3e-2e47-4a56-b6b1-61034852fbe8
Veighey, K
2adbaf5c-141a-44bd-a7eb-faf14e0ca251
MacAllister, R
9f4b26b2-72e1-4ccf-9338-362d6193085b
Clayton, T
df1b7003-688f-4814-b0c3-77d4d8d371da
Knight, R
72648411-42d9-4812-a669-f42351041866
Robertson, S
b02cb9cc-b506-4783-8186-3b36511a2d68
Nicholas, J
aed57b9f-7c12-41db-ae46-4e16e66aacfb
Motwani, M
d791ea3e-2e47-4a56-b6b1-61034852fbe8
Veighey, K
2adbaf5c-141a-44bd-a7eb-faf14e0ca251

MacAllister, R, Clayton, T, Knight, R, Robertson, S, Nicholas, J, Motwani, M and Veighey, K (2015) REmote preconditioning for Protection Against Ischaemia–Reperfusion in renal transplantation (REPAIR): a multicentre, multinational, double-blind, factorial designed randomised controlled trial National Institute for Health Research 84pp. (doi:10.3310/eme02030).

Record type: Monograph (Project Report)

Abstract

Background
Long-term kidney allograft survival has remained unchanged in recent years despite immunosuppressive and surgical advances. Ischaemia–reperfusion (IR) injury sustained at transplantation contributes to kidney damage that limits allograft lifespan. Interventions to reduce IR injury may prolong graft life, delaying the need for a return to dialysis. Remote ischaemic preconditioning (RIPC), in which brief episodes of non-lethal ischaemia applied to the limb activate a systemic protective reflex against subsequent damaging IR injury, has been reported to cause cardiac, renal and neurological protection in small-scale trials.
Objectives
The REmote preconditioning for Protection Against Ischaemia–Reperfusion in renal transplantation (REPAIR) trial investigated whether RIPC improves kidney function and other outcomes following living-donor renal transplantation.
Design
Multicentre, multinational, double-blind, 2 × 2 factorial designed randomised controlled trial.
Setting
Thirteen tertiary care hospitals in the UK, the Netherlands, Belgium and France.
Participants
The REPAIR trial recruited 406 live donor–recipient pairs aged ≥ 18 years. Patients on adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-sensitive potassium channel opening or blocking drugs, on ciclosporin, with a known iodine sensitivity or with ABO incompatibility or those requiring human leucocyte antigen (HLA) antibody removal therapy were excluded.
Interventions
Each pair was randomised using a factorial design to one of four groups: sham RIPC, early RIPC (immediately before surgery), late RIPC (24 hours before surgery) and dual RIPC (early and late RIPC). The donor and recipient received the same intervention (active RIPC or sham RIPC) at the two time points.
Main outcome measures
The primary outcome was glomerular filtration rate (GFR) 12 months after transplantation measured by iohexol clearance. Important secondary outcomes were estimated GFR (eGFR) (using routine clinical assessment), safety, inflammatory cytokine profile and biological mechanisms.
Results
In total, 406 donor–recipient pairs were randomised: 99 to sham RIPC, 102 to early RIPC, 103 to late RIPC and 102 to dual RIPC. Early RIPC resulted in a small but clinically important increase in iohexol GFR (ml/minute/1.73 m2) at 12 months, although the evidence is weak [58.3 vs. 55.9; adjusted difference 3.08, 95% confidence interval (CI) –0.89 to 7.04; p = 0.13], likely because of the higher than expected variability in the iohexol measurements. There was stronger evidence for a treatment effect when eGFR was used and missing values imputed (adjusted difference 3.41, 95% CI –0.21 to 7.04; p = 0.065) and when eGFR was used to assess kidney function (adjusted difference 4.98, 95% CI 1.13 to 8.29; p = 0.011). Late RIPC had no effect on renal outcomes, there was no benefit of combining early and late RIPC and RIPC had no effect on the inflammatory response to surgery. RIPC was safe and well tolerated by recipients and donors.
Conclusions
RIPC is a safe intervention in living-donor transplantation. The evidence for an effect of RIPC on GFR (primary outcome) was weak, but other measures of GFR (in our secondary analysis) provided persuasive evidence of a clinically meaningful improvement in kidney function after transplantation. Future work should investigate the role of RIPC in deceased-donor kidney transplantation.

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Published date: May 2015

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495316
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495316
PURE UUID: 91c1428b-3501-46aa-b31d-93798eb55d0e
ORCID for K Veighey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4903-1847

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Date deposited: 08 Nov 2024 17:48
Last modified: 09 Nov 2024 02:57

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Contributors

Author: R MacAllister
Author: T Clayton
Author: R Knight
Author: S Robertson
Author: J Nicholas
Author: M Motwani
Author: K Veighey ORCID iD

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