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Bleeding Gastric Varices clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Bleeding Gastric Varices.

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NCT ID: NCT02364297 Recruiting - Portal Hypertension Clinical Trials

TIPS in Fundal Variceal Bleeding (the TFB Study)

TFB
Start date: September 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In the last years, important advances have been done in the treatment and prevention of fundal variceal bleeding in patients with cirrhosis. Experts agree that the combination of pharmacological and endoscopic therapy (with tissue adhesives) should be the first line therapy in the acute bleeding episode from isolated gastric varices (IGV1) or type 2 gastroesophageal varices (GOV2) varices; whereas transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) is considered a rescue therapy. TIPS has been shown to effectively prevent variceal rebleeding but with a potential increase in the incidence of hepatic encephalopathy and/or liver failure. In this sense, a recent randomized controlled trial (RCT) in esophageal variceal bleeding showed that an early TIPS, performed during the first 72h after patient admission resulted in a significant decrease in failure to control bleeding and early and late rebleeding. Moreover, survival was also significantly increased as well as other portal-hypertension related complications (ascites, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, hepatorenal syndrome, etc). The present study is directed at comparing the outcome of patients with acute bleeding from fundal varices (IGV1 or GOV2) treated by standard therapy (vasoactive drugs + endoscopic injection of tissue adhesives) with or without early TIPS (performed during the first 1-5 days after admission). Main end-point will be survival free of variceal rebleeding at 1 year from inclusion.

NCT ID: NCT01298271 Recruiting - Liver Cirrhosis Clinical Trials

A Randomized Trial of GVS Alone vs. Propranolol

P-GVO
Start date: April 2010
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Design a randomized trial to compare the effect of endoscopic cyanoacrylate injection obliteration versus non-selective beta-blocker in the primary prevention of gastric variceal bleeding.