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Cirrhosis clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Cirrhosis.

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NCT ID: NCT05473325 Not yet recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

Benchtop NMR Spectroscopy for Assessment of Clinical Human Pathologies (BRANCH-P STUDY)

BRANCH-P
Start date: January 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This research programme seeks to combine the resources of NHS primary care, with the leading spectroscopic work in low-magnetic fields of the Wilson Group (Nottingham Trent University) to demonstrate the potential for benchtop Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy in human clinical pathology. This is an instrument assessment study for point of care viability which will also result in enhanced patient care (pending their consent) in blood screenings and metabolic health data.

NCT ID: NCT05467826 Not yet recruiting - Hepatitis C Clinical Trials

Efficacy and Safety of SOF/VEL + RBV and SOF/VEL/VOX for 12 Weeks in HCV Subjects With GT3b and Compensated Cirrhosis

Start date: September 1, 2022
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Direct-acting antiviral agents (DAAs) targeting HCV have revolutionized the treatment of HCV. The efficacy of DAA-based therapy can depend on patient-related factors such as treatment experience, cirrhosis, but also on viral genotype. The high prevalence of genotype 3, which is considered difficult to cure, remains a challenge because many oral DAAs are less effective for this genotype, particularly subtype 3b than for others. Current guidance generally recommends sofosbuvir (SOF)/velpatasvir (VEL) ± ribavirin (RBV), glecaprevir/pibrentasvir and SOF/VEL/voxilaprevir (VOX) as first-line therapy for genotype 3, and an interferon-based regimen - SOF plus pegylated interferon and ribavirin is still recommended as an alternative treatment option. These recommendations are based on clinical data generated in regions where genotype 3a predominates. Our recent study indicated that sofosbuvir plus ribavirin for 24 weeks in subjects with HCV genotype 3 infection resulted in high rates of SVR. However, the SVR12 rate among subjects with genotype 3b was lower than that observed in subjects with genotype 3a infection, particularly among treatment-experienced subjects with cirrhosis. Our study aimed to investigate the efficacy and safety of SOF/VEL plus RBV for 12 weeks or SOF/VEL/VOX for 12 weeks in DAAs treatment naïve HCV subjects with GT3b, compensated cirrhosis in China.

NCT ID: NCT05357599 Not yet recruiting - Cirrhosis Clinical Trials

The Use of Endoscopic Ultrasound-Guided Portal Pressure Measurements to Guide Beta-Blocker Therapy in Patients With Compensated Cirrhosis

Start date: December 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This pilot study to determine the feasibility of EUS-Portal Pressure Measurements to guide Beta-Blocker Therapy in patients with compensated cirrhosis .The study will be a prospective tandem controlled trial consisting of 30 patients who are already undergoing routine endoscopy screening for portal hypertension as part of their routine clinical care . The decision to start a beta-blocker will be made at the conclusion of the EGD based on the endoscopic findings (presence of esophageal varices). EUS-PPG will then be performed and measurements will be collected. The primary outcome is the feasibility of guiding B blocker therapy by EGD+EUS-PPG at the time of EGD for variceal screening. The secondary outcome will be the proportion of patients initiated on beta-blocker therapy based on EGD alone versus EGD+EUS-PPG

NCT ID: NCT05205954 Not yet recruiting - Liver Cirrhosis Clinical Trials

HepHospital: A Hepatology Home Hospital Intervention for Patients With Advanced Liver Disease

Start date: March 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This research study is evaluating a program that entails home-based care for people with advanced liver disease.

NCT ID: NCT05095714 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Hepatocellular Carcinoma

FAST-IRM for HCC suRveillance in pAtients With High risK of Liver Cancer.

FASTRAK
Start date: December 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Intro: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the 6th leading cause of cancer worldwide. In France, more than 10,000 new cases are identified each year. The latter occur in 85% of cases in cirrhosis, the most frequent causes of which are excessive alcohol consumption, metabolic syndrome or HBV/HCV infection. Patients with cirrhosis justify being included in monitoring programs involving the performance of a semi-annual liver ultrasound (US) in order to detect HCC eligible for curative treatment (liver resection or percutaneous ablation). This practice is considered to be cost-effective in the event of an annual incidence of HCC> 1.5%. US in this context has a low sensitivity for the detection of HCC at the very early stage and the following observations have been made in the last 20 years: - The rate of patients detected at early stage BCLC 0 is around 30% by ultrasound - The rate of patients included in surveillance programs detected with advanced HCC eligible for palliative treatment is around 20% - Reducing the periodicity of liver ultrasounds from 6 to 3 months does not improve these results. In parallel, liver MRI has been evaluated as a tool for the early detection of HCC. Its performance for the detection of HCC at the very early stage exceeds 80%. However, due to the higher cost compared to US, it was estimated that its use in screening context would only be cost effective in the event of an annual incidence> 3%. In addition, the practice of these expensive and long-lasting MRIs (30 to 45 minutes) can be optimized by carrying out abbreviated MRI protocols" or Fast-MRI: short protocols (<10 minutes), based on the sequences with the better detection sensitivities (Se> 83%). The hypothesis is that Fast-MRI used as a screening examination in patients at high risk of HCC (> 3% per year) could increase the rates of patients detected at an early stage accessible to curative treatment and demonstrate its cost-effectiveness in this population. Hypothesis/Objective: The main objective is to assess the cost / QALY and / patient detected with an early HCC BCLC 0 (single tumor <2cm) by semi-annual monitoring by liver US and Fast-MRI, compared to conventional semi-annual monitoring by liver US alone in patients with cirrhosis and an anticipated HCC incidence>3%. Conclusion: If positive, this trial could modify international practice guidelines and set MRI as the optimal tool for early HCC detection in high-risk patients.

NCT ID: NCT04925362 Not yet recruiting - Cirrhosis Clinical Trials

THE FRENCH NATIONAL NAFLD COHORT (FRench pAtients With MEtabolic Steatosis)

FRAMES
Start date: June 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The main objective of this cohort study is to determine genetic, clinical biologic and metabolic factors associated with patient heterogeneity in regards to severity of NAFLD at diagnosis as well as during the clinical course. - at diagnosis, with the aim to better characterize patients of different severity and improve our understanding of clinical and histological heterogeneity at diagnosis - during the clinical course to better understand and predict disease progression in terms notably of fibrosis progression and progression to cirrhosis

NCT ID: NCT04057326 Not yet recruiting - Cirrhosis Clinical Trials

A Study of Oryz-Aspergillus Enzyme and Pancreatin Tablet in Patients With Cirrhosis and Malnutrition

Start date: August 30, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigation is a randomized, double-blind, placebo involved and multi-center clinical trial. All subjects are assigned to 2 groups, including Oryz-Aspergillus Enzyme and Pancreatin tablet group (treatment group) and the placebo group (control group). Treatment group includes 99 subjects, while control group includes 33 subjects. They receive investigational drug 2 tablets/times, tid, p.o. for 180 days.

NCT ID: NCT04053231 Not yet recruiting - Surgery Clinical Trials

Hepatocarcinoma Recurrence on the Liver Study - Part2

HERCOLES2
Start date: September 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Rationale for the trial. To evaluate the impact of surgery on hepatocarcinoma recurrence. Thus, to evaluate the impact of different clinical, radiological, histopathological variables on recurrence after surgical treatment. The nature of this study will allow to observe, over time, the distribution of the considered collection variables, allowing a strictly observational monitoring of possible associations able to suggest models or interpretations, which can then be the basis for the construction of prospective and randomized studies.

NCT ID: NCT04023136 Not yet recruiting - Cirrhosis Clinical Trials

Liver Resection Modeling

LRM
Start date: July 15, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Despite the medical and surgical progress of the last two decades, the selection of candidates for liver surgery remains based on old principles and insufficiently sensitive to fine-tune the gesture to patient-specific characteristics and make almost zero risks of postoperative liver failure (PLF) and death. It is therefore necessary to develop new tools that will make possible to predict the evolution of the postoperative portocaval gradient (difference of pressure between portal vein and vena cava), a well-known major risk factor for PLF. Hemodynamic modeling of the human liver during surgery will represent the purpose of this work in order to help the clinicians in their patient's selection and anticipation of postoperative risk.

NCT ID: NCT03946852 Not yet recruiting - Liver Cancer Clinical Trials

Abdominal Regional Perfusion in Donation After Cardiac Death for Multi-Organ Transplantation

Start date: June 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The main purpose of this study is to increase the pool of organs available for donation by performing ARP to recondition donation after cardiac death (DCD) organs prior to transplantation. We will compare the outcomes of our ARP DCD liver transplants with historical data to determine the efficacy of this treatment compared to transplantation with standard DCD and donation after brain death (DBD) organs. We will also analyze biological samples from donors and recipients and compare them with outcome data in an effort to determine if any biological markers are able to predict the quality/success of the grafts.