FIND FREEDOM WITH THE POWER OF TWO
While immunosuppressive medicines (also known as anti-rejection medicines) are used to prevent the immune system from rejecting the new kidney, they carry the risk of infection, cancer, neurotoxicity (difficulty sleeping, tremor or tingling sensations in the limbs), and other health complications that may affect the longevity of your newly transplanted kidney, including nephrotoxicity (abnormal kidney function), diabetes (high blood sugar), and cardiovascular (heart) disease.
The goal of the FREEDOM-1 and FREEDOM-2 clinical trials is to help determine if a living donor kidney transplant and a stem cell transplant with investigational cell therapy could help prevent the rejection of the donor’s kidney and eliminate the need for life-long immunosuppressive medicines.
Together, can we unlock a future free from immunosuppression?
Visit https://freedom1study.com/ or https://freedom-2study.com/ to learn more and take the pre-screener to see if you are eligible to take part.