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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02786836
Other study ID # STU 122015-008
Secondary ID U01DK058369
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2/Phase 3
First received
Last updated
Start date June 10, 2016
Est. completion date September 18, 2019

Study information

Verified date November 2020
Source University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The ALFSG-MBT protocol is for a multicenter, open label, non-randomized study to determine the value of Breath Identification® (BreathID®) N-(4-Methoxy-13C-phenyl)acetamide (13C-Methacetin) Breath Test System in predicting the outcome of patients diagnosed with severe acute liver injury that is not related to acetaminophen overdose or acute liver failure who meet inclusion/exclusion criteria. Up to 200 evaluable patients will be enrolled. An evaluable patient is one who has completed one or more breath tests for at least 30 minutes after administration of the 13C-Methacetin solution (test substrate). The Breath Test will be performed up to five times during the study period on all enrolled patients. The first Breath Test will be performed upon admission into the study (Day 1) and repeated on Days 2, 3, 5 and 7 provided no contra-indications are present. Each test continuously measures changes in the metabolism of the 13C-Methacetin in order to assess the improvement or deterioration in liver metabolic function about improvement or deterioration in liver metabolic function. If an enrolled non-APAP ALI or ALF patient receives a liver transplant, is discharged /transferred from the hospital or dies prior to Day 7, additional Breath Tests will not be performed. Patients will be contacted for the Day 21 follow up (21 days after enrollment into the trial) to determine spontaneous survival, transplantation and occurrence of serious adverse events since the patient's last study treatment.


Description:

The importance of identifying the patient with with ALI or ALF who is likely to die without a liver transplant cannot be overstated and has remained a primary focus of clinical investigation for 25 years. A recent analysis also conducted by the Acute Liver Failure Study Group (ALFSG) found that poor outcomes in the ALI patients are less frequent than is observed in the ALF population. However, in cases where ALI was not related to an acetaminophen (APAP) overdose, progression to poor outcomes was similar. Traditional scoring systems and prognostic models, such as King's College Criteria (KCC), Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) and Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II (APACHE II), currently used to monitor patients with ALF lack individual sensitivity and specificity and do not provide direct information about the liver's metabolic function, which is a key variable in assessing liver status and potential disease progression versus recovery in ALF patients. Despite recent advances used by the ALFSG Prognostic Index (ALFSG-PI), ALI Prognostic Index (ALI-PI) and Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD), better predictive modalities are still needed. The 13C-Methacetin breath test is a rapid, reproducible, point-of-care test of liver metabolic function. After oral or naso-enteric/orogastric tube administration, the 13C labeled Methacetin is O-demethylated by cytochrome P450 1A2 (liver enzyme name) in the liver and further biotransformed into carbon dioxide labeled with carbon 13 (13CO2), which is expired in breath. The BreathID® Molecular Correlation Spectroscopy (MCS) device captures and quantifies expired 13CO2 and standardizes recovery against expired normal carbon dioxide (12CO2) through a nasal cannula (in conscious patients) or an adaptor connected to the ventilator line (for intubated patients). The results obtained from the device are expressed as delta over baseline (DOB), which expresses the change in 13CO2/12CO2 ratio in comparison to the baseline measurement. It can be transformed into the percentage of 13C dose recovered over time (PDR) after the ingestion of Methacetin, and the cumulative PDR (CPDR), the rate at which 13C substrate is metabolized, derived from the breath 13C/12C ratio. This is a multicenter, open label, non-randomized study of the MBT to assess functional trends of liver metabolism in patients diagnosed with severe acute liver injury not related to acetaminophen overdose (non-APAP ALI) or acute liver failure (ALF). Up to 200 evaluable patients with non-APAP ALI or ALF present at the time of enrollment into the ALFSG Registry will be consecutively enrolled. An evaluable patient is one who has completed one or more Breath Tests measured for a minimum of 30 (and ideally 60) minutes after administration of the 13C-Methacetin solution. Study sites will include up to 11 of the clinical sites located in the United States that are involved in the ALFSG. The Breath Test will be performed up to five times during the study period on all enrolled subjects. The first Breath Test will be performed as close to the time of study enrollment as possible upon admission into the study (Day 1). The Breath Test will be repeated on Days 2, 3, 5 and 7 as close as possible to the same time of day as the first Breath Test. If a subject who is enrolled into the ALFSG-MBT Trial with non-APAP ALI converts to ALF, breath test collection will continue until a maximum of five Breath Tests have been performed. If an enrolled non-APAP ALI or ALF subject receives a liver transplant, is discharged/transferred from the hospital or dies prior to Day 7, no additional Breath Tests will be performed. Enrolled patients will be contacted for the Day 21 follow up (21 days after the subject's enrollment into the trial) to determine spontaneous survival, transplantation and occurrence of serious adverse events since the subject's last study treatment.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 76
Est. completion date September 18, 2019
Est. primary completion date September 18, 2019
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 80 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: 1. Adult men or women (18-80 years of age) 2. Severe acute liver injury not related to acetaminophen overdose: INR =2.0; no evidence of HE 3. Acute liver failure: INR =1.5; presence of any degree of HE 4. Duration of illness <26 weeks 5. Enrolled into the ALFSG Registry. 6. Written informed consent from the patient or patient's legally authorized representative or family member as defined in the Federal Register Number 21 Congressional Federal Register (CFR)50.3(m) Exclusion Criteria: 1. Evidence of pre-existing chronic liver disease 2. Pre-existing New York Heart Association stage III/IV heart failure 3. Evidence of pre-existing chronic renal failure 4. Chronic hemodialysis prior to hospital admission 5. Evidence of cirrhosis (unless clinically acute Wilson disease or autoimmune non-APAP ALI or ALF) 6. Severe obstructive lung disease (FEV1 <50% of predicted on previous spirometry) 7. Severe shock, defined as mean arterial pressure (MAP) <70 mmHg despite >15 µg/kg/min dopamine, >0.1 µg/kg/min epinephrine, or >0.1 norepinephrine µg/kg/min 8. Extensive small bowel resection (>50 cm) 9. Any evidence of upper GI bleeding at enrollment requiring intervention (endoscopy or red blood cell (RBC) transfusion specifically for upper GI bleeding) 10. Liver transplantation (LT) prior to enrollment. (Note: Listing for LT does not preclude participation in the trial.) 11. Pregnancy or breastfeeding women (Note: Pregnancy related non-APAP ALI or ALF may be considered for entry following the delivery of the baby and assuming the mother does not wish to breastfeed or collect breast milk during the study period.) 12. Allergic to acetaminophen (such as Tylenol® or any other acetaminophen-containing medications) 13. Participation in other clinical studies evaluating other experimental treatments or procedures. (Note: Participation in observatory studies is not an exclusion.) 14. Patients in whom enteral drugs or fluids are contra-indicated or the patient either does not have an appropriately placed naso-enteric/orogastric tube in situ or cannot tolerate taking the drug preparation orally (200 ml) 15. Budd-Chiari Syndrome 16. Non-APAP ALI or ALF caused by malignancy 17. Moderate and severe adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), as defined by Berlin Criteria. 18. Subjects who have received amiodarone in the 30 days prior to study enrollment 19. Consumption of any food or beverage that contains caffeine in the 24 hours prior to enrollment 20. Consumption of any of the following drugs that may interfere with the metabolism of 13C-Methacetin in the 48 hours prior to study enrollment including: allopurinol, carbamazepine, cimetidine, ciprofloxacin, daidzein, disulfiram, Echinacea, enoxacin, fluvoxamine, methoxsalen, mexiletine, montelukast, norfloxacin, phenylpropanolamine, phenytoin, propafenone, rifampin, terbinafine, ticlopidine, thiabendazole, verapamil, zileuton or oral contraceptives 21. Consumption of alcohol in the 24 hours prior to enrollment 22. Smoking cigarettes in the 8 hours prior to enrollment.

Study Design


Intervention

Drug:
13C-Methacetin
The test substrate in this study, ¹³C-methacetin solution for single-use oral administration (75 mg in 150 ml purified water), is administered orally or via feeding tube, rapidly absorbed, exclusively metabolized by hepatic mixed function oxidase via O-demethylation, mainly by cytochrome P450 enzyme, subtype 1A2, into acetaminophen and formaldehyde. The formaldehyde is then transformed through two successive oxidative steps to ¹³carbon dioxide, the quantity of which is measured in exhaled breath as a ratio of 13C to 12C. The nasal or intubated breath sampling investigational device (ID) circuit continuously transports the breath sample from the patient to the BreathID® MCS device before and following administration of the 13C-methylacetanilide test substrate.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan
United States University of Alabama, Birmingham Birmingham Alabama
United States Medical University of South Carolina Charleston South Carolina
United States Northwestern University Chicago Illinois
United States Ohio State University Medical Center Columbus Ohio
United States UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas Dallas Texas
United States University of Kansas Medical Center Kansas City Kansas
United States Yale University School of Medicine New Haven Connecticut
United States VCU Medical Center Richmond Virginia
United States University of California, San Francisco San Francisco California
United States University of Washington Medical Center Seattle Washington

Sponsors (5)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Exalenz Bioscience LTD., Medical University of South Carolina, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK), University of Michigan

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

References & Publications (16)

Allman K, Wilson I. Oxford Handbook of Anaesthesia. 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press 2006;xxiv:1203.

Audimoolam VK, Patel VC, Bernal W, Meir M, Lalazar G, Ilan Y, Wendon J. Use of an on-line at the point of care 13C-methacetin breath test as an adjunct tool for decision making in patients with acute liver failure. Hepatology 56;4Suppl:970A.

Cholongitas E, Senzolo M, Patch D, Kwong K, Nikolopoulou V, Leandro G, Shaw S, Burroughs AK. Risk factors, sequential organ failure assessment and model for end-stage liver disease scores for predicting short term mortality in cirrhotic patients admitted to intensive care unit. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2006 Apr 1;23(7):883-93. — View Citation

Craig DG, Ford AC, Hayes PC, Simpson KJ. Systematic review: prognostic tests of paracetamol-induced acute liver failure. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2010 May;31(10):1064-76. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2036.2010.04279.x. Epub 2010 Feb 24. Review. — View Citation

de Franchis R. Updating consensus in portal hypertension: report of the Baveno III Consensus Workshop on definitions, methodology and therapeutic strategies in portal hypertension. J Hepatol. 2000 Nov;33(5):846-52. — View Citation

Goetze O, Selzner N, Fruehauf H, Fried M, Gerlach T, Mullhaupt B. 13C-methacetin breath test as a quantitative liver function test in patients with chronic hepatitis C infection: continuous automatic molecular correlation spectroscopy compared to isotopic ratio mass spectrometry. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2007 Jul 15;26(2):305-11. — View Citation

Koch DG, Battenhouse H, Durkalski V, Lee WM, Reuben A. Clinical predictors of spontaneous survival in acute liver failure (ALF) patients with advanced coma. Hepatology 56;4Suppl:964A.

Koch DG, Speiser JL, Durkalski V, Fontana RJ, Davern T, McGuire B, Stravitz RT, Larson AM, Liou I, Fix O, Schilsky ML, McCashland T, Hay JE, Murray N, Shaikh OS, Ganger D, Zaman A, Han SB, Chung RT, Brown RS, Munoz S, Reddy KR, Rossaro L, Satyanarayana R, Hanje AJ, Olson J, Subramanian RM, Karvellas C, Hameed B, Sherker AH, Lee WM, Reuben A. The Natural History of Severe Acute Liver Injury. Am J Gastroenterol. 2017 Sep;112(9):1389-1396. doi: 10.1038/ajg.2017.98. Epub 2017 Apr 25. — View Citation

Lalazar G, Adar T, Ilan Y. Point-of-care continuous (13)C-methacetin breath test improves decision making in acute liver disease: results of a pilot clinical trial. World J Gastroenterol. 2009 Feb 28;15(8):966-72. — View Citation

Lalazar G, Mullhaupt, B., Margalit M. Point of care non-invasive 13C methacetin breath testing accurately identifies significant liver inflammation and fibrosis: a novel method for assessing liver damage. Gastroenterology; 2007 abstract

Lalazar G, Pappo O, Hershcovici T, Hadjaj T, Shubi M, Ohana H, Hemed N, Ilan Y. A continuous 13C methacetin breath test for noninvasive assessment of intrahepatic inflammation and fibrosis in patients with chronic HCV infection and normal ALT. J Viral Hepat. 2008 Oct;15(10):716-28. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2893.2008.01007.x. Epub 2008 Jul 11. — View Citation

Lee WM, James L, Wendon J, Stravitz RT, Pop OT, Audimoolam VK. Does Methacetin breath testing increase acetaminophen hepatotoxicity in the setting of acute liver failure? Hepatology 2015: Accepted for poster presentation at the AASLD Liver Meeting held in San Francisco from November 13-17, 2015.

Nista EC, Fini L, Armuzzi A, Candelli M, Zocco MA, Cazzato IA, Merra G, Finizio R, Miele L, Grieco A, Gasbarrini G, Gasbarrini A. 13C-breath tests in the study of microsomal liver function. Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci. 2004 Jan-Feb;8(1):33-46. Review. — View Citation

O'Grady JG, Alexander GJ, Hayllar KM, Williams R. Early indicators of prognosis in fulminant hepatic failure. Gastroenterology. 1989 Aug;97(2):439-45. — View Citation

Starmer GA, McLean S, Thomas J. Analgesic potency and acute toxicity of substituted anilides and benzamides. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 1971 May;19(1):20-8. — View Citation

Stravitz RT, Reuben A, Mizrahi M, Lalazar G, Brown K, Gordon SC, Ilan Y, Sanyal A. Use of the methacetin breath test to classify the risk of cirrhotic complications and mortality in patients evaluated/listed for liver transplantation. J Hepatol. 2015 Dec;63(6):1345-51. doi: 10.1016/j.jhep.2015.07.021. Epub 2015 Jul 26. — View Citation

* Note: There are 16 references in allClick here to view all references

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Peak Percent Dose Recovery (PDR) Value Peak PDR is the maximal percent dose recovery (PDR) rate which reflects the maximum rate of metabolism of 13C-methacetin measured as the change in 13CO2 / 12CO2 (normal carbon dioxide) ratio after ingestion of 13C-methacetin normalized using the patient's height and weight. The distributions of mean PDR Peak values were compared between TFS (transplant free survival) and non-TFS (death/transplant) at Day 21. Days 1 and 21
Secondary Peak Percent Dose Recovery (PDR) Value This outcome is similar to the peak PDR defined in the primary outcome but as a secondary we are looking at Day 1 or Day 2 peak PDR values. Peak PDR is the maximal percent dose recovery (PDR) rate which reflects the maximum rate of metabolism of 13C-methacetin measured as the change in 13CO2 / 12CO2 ratio after ingestion of 13C-methacetin normalized using the patient's height and weight. The distributions of mean PDR Peak values were compared between TFS and non-TFS (death/transplant) at Day 21. The first MBT reading either on Day 1 or Day 2 and Day 21
Secondary Cumulative Percent Dose Recovery 20 (cPDR20) Value The relationship between the cPDR (cumulative PDR of metabolized 13C-Methacetin 20 minutes after ingestion) in single time points of MBT measurements and TFS and non-TFS (death/transplant) at Day 21. The first MBT reading either on Day 1 or Day 2 and Day 21
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