View clinical trials related to Fibrosis.
Filter by:A prospective series comparing care incorporating home monitoring and liver care coordination to conventional care for patients with cirrhosis.
This is an open-label extension study for participants who completed a Phase 3, placebo-controlled study of ataluren in participants with nonsense mutation cystic fibrosis (nmCF) not receiving chronic inhaled aminoglycosides.
A total of 46 patients diagnosed with liver cirrhosis will be recruited. All patients will be evaluated with five psychometric tests and critical flicker frequency to diagnosis minimal hepatic encephalopathy (MHE). A breath test sample will be performed in all patients with MHE with 10 g of lactulose to establish the diagnosis of small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO). Patients diagnosed with EHM and SIBO will be randomized to receive per day 1200 mg of rifaximin (group A) or placebo (group B) for 2 weeks. A complete medical history, nutritional assessment, biochemical studies, and evaluation of quality of life will be performed in all patients included in the study. Besides the initial visit, patients will receive subsequent care 2, 4, 8, 12, and 24 weeks after the beginning of the study.
Chronic liver injury leads to the accumulation of proteins in the liver that form dense scars. Liver scar formation is typically a slow process that leads to major organ damage and loss of function over the course of many years. During scar formation the extracellular matrix in the liver changes. The type and quantity of extracellular collagen and other proteins change during tissue remodeling. Some of these changes can be detected by analyzing factors present in blood. Because of the lengthy time course, changes in the rate of liver scar formation and regression are very difficult measure; however, accurate measurements are needed in order to conduct trials of interventions aimed at preventing scar formation and/or promotion scar regression. Current methods have sub-optimal specificity and selectivity. The long term objective of the study is to identify serum proteins that can be used to accurately estimate rates of liver fibrosis progression and regression. The project focusses on a novel methodology that uses stable isotope labeling with deuterated water, D2O, to tag newly-synthesized proteins. Mass spectroscopy is used to identify individual proteins and to quantify the ratio of labeled protein to total protein. This ratio provides information about the rate of synthesis of the protein of interest. This method will be applied to specimens from patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection who are about to begin HCV treatment. Treatment is known to reduce liver inflammation and collagen content.
This study will evaluate the safety, tolerability and influence on itching, bile acids and liver enzyme changes in patients with PBC (Primary Biliary Cirrhosis) treated with A4250
We propose to test the effectiveness of the combination of CF pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy (PERT) on absorption of Ravicti® and subsequent restoration of nasal epithelial cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)-mediated chloride transport during the nasal potential difference (NPD) test. Funding source FDA Office of Orphan Products Development.
Metformin treatment during 36 months could be associated with decreased risk of HCC occurrence and liver related death in patients with compensated HCV cirrhosis and insulinoresistance. This study is an ancillary of the observational study from the CIRVIR cohort in which more than 1200 patients with compensated HCV cirrhosis are currently included. participating centers : 26
This is a 2 year research study to study if post discharge phone calls can help lengthen time to hospital readmissions for patients with encephalopathy.
The aim of this study is to compare three different blood transfusion strategies for coagulopathy correction before central venous catheterization in patients with chronic liver failure (cirrhosis and/or chronic liver graft dysfunction) admitted in intensive care unit.
Primary Biliary Cholangitis (PBC) is a serious, life-threatening, bile acid related liver disease of unknown cause. Without treatment, it frequently progresses to liver fibrosis and eventual cirrhosis requiring liver transplantation or resulting in death. The investigational drug, Obeticholic Acid (OCA) is a modified bile acid and FXR agonist that is derived from the primary human bile acid chenodeoxycholic acid. The key mechanisms of action of OCA, including its choleretic, anti-inflammatory, and anti-fibrotic properties, underlie its hepatoprotective effects and result in attenuation of injury and improved liver function in a cholestatic liver disease such as PBC. The study will assess the effect of OCA compared to placebo, combined with stable standard care, on clinical outcomes in PBC participants.