There are about 5618 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in India. The country of the clinical trial is determined by the location of where the clinical research is being studied. Most studies are often held in multiple locations & countries.
Preoperative sepsis timeline, profile and its association with recipient outcome following live donor liver transplant.
The project is essential to understand the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in patients with Chronic Liver Disease (CLD). The impact has been felt due to direct risk of COVID infection in self, or in caregivers, lack of access to services during lockdown, interruptions in transplant listing and waitlist mortality. Briefly, the following points will be focused during the study. 1. Long haul COVID-19 related symptoms. 2. Impact on health and delay in interventions or drug therapy due to interruption of physical outpatient services. 3. Impact on emergency admissions due to refractory ascites, new decompensation, variceal bleeding etc 4. Impact on delayed transplant listing and waitlist mortality 5. Impact on post-transplant patients with lack of access to drug monitoring/ physical OPD 6. Impact on delay in interventions due to hepatobiliary malignancy. 7. Effects of COVID-19 infection, vaccination (single dose, two doses) and no vaccination and protective antibody levels in patients with chronic liver disease and post-transplant recipients. 8. Determination of dose protocol and need for booster vaccination in patients with CLD and post liver transplant recipients.
Nutrition therapy is the cornerstone of medical therapy in patients with cirrhosis. 70% compensated patients with Chronic Liver Disease (CLD) are overweight or obese. Obesity in CLD augments decompensation, plausibly through increase in portal pressure. Moreover, the cardiometabolic risk factors are increased with increase in body weight, obesity also has an impact on the already compromised health-related quality of life of patients with CLD. Most feasible, safe, and widely used method of management of obesity is life-style modifications. Hypocaloric with normal to high protein diet along with moderate-intensity exercises have been practiced for weight reduction. These kinds of dietary changes reduce body weight and may bring about favourable changes in the body composition (reduce the body fat percentage but at the same time preserving the lean body mass). Weight loss in obese patients with CLD would in turn improve the clinical outcome, reduce the hepatic complications, moreover weight loss may also improve health related quality of life, and other prognostic markers of the disease like fibroscan along with improvement in the associated metabolic derangements in patients with CLD. There is no Indian data in this context. Thus, through this trial, investigator would be able to ascertain an appropriate lifestyle-related non- intervention regimen that helps in the management of obesity in patients with cirrhosis. Not only that the baseline information of these obese patients with CLD would give us an idea or the profile of the body composition in terms of muscularity, adiposity, sarcopenic obesity (if any), of these patients with CLD.
Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences (MGIMS), Sevagram, District Wardha, Maharashtra, India is located in a rural setup and caters to a very underprivileged patient population with limited resources to even pay for their treatment. As per the latest Indian Cancer Registry Report 2020, of the 28 population based cancer registries (PBCR), the age adjusted incidence rates (AAR) in males and females are 64.9 and 69.9. This makes the AAR in Wardha District (district where MGIMS is located) as one of the lowest ranked AAR both for male (national range: 39.5 - 269.4) and females (national range: 49.4 - 219.8) in the country. However, the %mortality / incidence, is one of the highest for Wardha, both for males (65.9%, national range: 14.7% - 71.9%) and females (53%, national range: 9% - 63%). This indicates that the prognosis of patients in this district is one of the worst in India and thus requires a new approach to their standard therapeutic option. This has to be cost-effective, without any significant additional morbidity, and should used in conjunction to the standard treatment of radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy. Hyperthermia, which is raising the tumor temperature to 40 - 43°C is perhaps one of the oldest forms of treatment for cancer. Hyperthermia, being a potent radiosensitizer, a chemosensitizer, an immunomodulator with no significantly added side effects, could be an effective therapeutic modality that could be expected to improve the outcome in these patients. However, it also needs to be cost-effective and require low capital cost investment so that other centers, especially in low and low-middle income countries could also introduce hyperthermia to the therapeutic armamentarium for cancer. This is a registry trial for patients being treated with hyperthermia along with radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy as per the standard departmental protocol for various locally advanced cancers.
This is an interventional, randomized, parallel group, treatment, Phase 3b/4, double blind, 2-arm study to assess the effect of dupilumab compared to standard of care therapy on preventing or slowing the rate of lung function decline in adult patients with uncontrolled moderate to severe asthma. The estimated duration is 4±1 weeks of screening and run-in period, followed by a 3-year double blinded treatment period. There will be a post-treatment follow-up (FU) period up to 12 weeks.
Sarcopenia is now a well-known complication of cirrhosis and various studies, including pediatric studies, have recognized it as a poor prognostic factor. At the molecular level, branch chain amino acids upregulate muscle protein synthesis by acting through the mTOR pathway. Although effect of Branch Chain Amino acids has been studied extensively with respect to hepatic encephalopathy in cirrhotic adults, there is paucity of literature on the effect of BCAA on sarcopenia and frailty. Also, there is very limited data on the effect of BCAA therapy in children with chronic liver disease. Through this study, we aim to assess the effect of BCAA therapy on Mid Arm Muscle Area in cirrhotic children after 12 weeks. Our secondary objective will be to study the prevalence of sarcopenia in children with CLD using cut-off as Mid Arm Muscle area less than 2SD (using published centiles) and muscle thickness (quadriceps and biceps) on ultrasound, and to study serum follistatin levels in those with or without sarcopenia. Other secondary objectives will include determination of mTOR gene expression at baseline and 7 days of BCAA therapy and change in creatinine height index after 12 weeks of BCAA therapy, occurrence of clinically significant events in the BCAA group vs placebo group and to study the increase in MAMA and USG muscle thickness after 6 months of BCAA therapy.
In this study nurses will be taught regarding Modified Early Warning Score and how to mark the involved physiological parameters in the MEWS chart and then scoring will be given i.e MEWS score and according to the score intervention would be taken by nurses by communicating with other health team members. this scoring will allow nurses to assess early deterioration and early ICU admission and at last nurses will be asked regarding the barriers or facilitators they faced while performing MEWS score.
The primary objective of the phase 1 trial is to identify a dose of topotecan that will be safe to take forward into a Phase 2 trial, with no unexpected toxicities or drug-drug interactions with standard therapy for COVID-19. The investigators hypothesise that a single dose of low-dose Topotecan will blunt the expression of inflammatory genes in patients with moderate COVID-19, without cytotoxic side effects.
Quasi experimental study to check the effectiveness of Nurse-led family Intervention on stress, engagement with patient care and satisfaction among primary caregivers of chronic liver disease patients admitted in high depency unit ILBS, two group pre test post test design non randomisation with the Nurse-led family intervention with the sample size of 80 using purposive sampling technique and having independent variable as Nurse-led family intervention and dependent variables are stress, Engagement with patient care and satisfaction and these variables are assesed by using kingston caregivers scale(KCSS) caregiver health engagement scale (CHEW-S)and one knowledge questionnaire based on engagement and satisfaction scale
Statins have a protective effect in patients with established heart failure because of their lipid-lowering and pleiotropic effects. There is no randomized controlled trial comparing lipophilic versus hydrophilic statins in these patients (head to head comparison). The best evidence so far is from a meta-analysis in which the authors did an adjusted indirect comparison between lipophilic statins and rosuvastatin and found that lipophilic statins were associated with significantly lower incidence of all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, and hospitalization for worsening heart failure compared to rosuvastatin (hydrophilic statin) among patients with heart failure. So, the investigators plan to conduct a randomized controlled trial comparing the effects of atorvastatin and rosuvastatin on cardiac function in patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction.