View clinical trials related to Liver Cirrhosis.
Filter by:This phase IIa trial studies long-term low-dose erlotinib hydrochloride treatment to assess its efficacy and safety to prevent development of hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with liver cirrhosis.
The aim of the present work is to study platelet indices ( platelet count - mean platelet volume - platelet distribution width ) as noninvasive predictors in decompensated post hepatitic liver cirrhosis .
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.
Acute on chronic liver failure (ACLF) is a distinct syndrome in patients with chronic liver disease with rapid clinical deterioration and has high short term mortality within one month.Despite aggressive clinical care, only half of the patients could survive an episode of ACLF. The investigators hypothesized that the early treatment with therapeutic plasma exchange with plasma and albumin in ACLF patients might improve overall survival in carefully selected patients by removing cytokines, chemokines and toxic substances.
This study is an prospective, randomized control study. Patients with decompensated cirrhosis will be randomly assigned to receive 4 times of SHED treatment plus standard medical care(treatment)or standard medical care (control). The primary outcome is MELD-Na score. Secondary outcomes are Child-Pugh, liver function, life quality and survival.
resolution of hyponatremia, defined as an increase in serum sodium of more than 5 mEq/L with a final value > 130 mEq/L, maintained for at least 48 consecutive hours during the 10-day treatment period
To evaluate the effects of DAAs on HRQL in patients with liver cirrhosis secondary to chronic HCV infection
Adult patients with chronic hepatitis B and cirrhosis of any etiology who are found to have suspected liver cancer are potentially eligible for the study. All enrolled patients will undergo two MRI scans using two different contrast agents. The type of contrast agent for the 1st MRI will be performed using hepatocyte-specific contrast agent. The participant will undergo the 2nd MRI using extracellular contrast agent. The MRI examinations will be independently interpreted by two different radiologists. The radiologists will evaluate focal hepatic lesions and categorize them according to the LI-RADS v2018 and EASL 2018. Once the diagnosis is made, the participants will be provided with the standard of care. After the initial treatment, the participants will be followed up with multi-phasic dynamic contrast-enhanced CT every 3 or 6 months for at least 2 years. Based on the prospectively written radiology reports, the diagnostic performances will be calculated and compared between MRI with hepatocyte-specific contrast agent and MRI with extracellular contrast agent, using the pathology and clinical criteria as the reference standard.
the investigators want to identify the microbial profile, antibiotic resistant bacteria in hepatic patients with infections in Liver ICU, and explore risk factors and outcomes in those patients with antibiotic resistant bacteria.
Background. The main risk factor for the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is cirrhosis of any etiology, with an annual risk between 1 and 6%, being currently the leading cause of death in patients with cirrhosis and the third cause of death for cancer in the world. In our country there is little information about the incidence of HCC in this population. It has been shown that there is a change in the gut microbiome (set of genetic material of microorganisms that make up the intestinal bacterial flora) as the severity of the cirrhosis progresses. This change in the microbiome has been associated with clinical decompensation events of cirrhosis. However, there are no previous studies in the world that demonstrate an impact of the change of the microbiome in cirrhosis as a precursor to the development of HCC. Our team has compared the profile of the microbiome in patients with cirrhosis with and without HCC. We observed that patients with HCC present changes in the phylum Firmicutes, genus Fusobacterium and change in the bacteroides / prevotella ratio. This pattern was associated with a pro-inflammatory profile. In murine models, it has been postulated that modulation of the gut microbiome through the use of probiotics could have a clinical role in the prevention of HCC development. This research project aims to answer the following question: in patients with cirrhosis, does the nutritional supplement with probiotics prevent HCC development? Objective: To compare the incidence of HCC through intervention with probiotics in cirrhosis. Methods: A randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled trial of probiotics in patients with Child Pugh A-B cirrhosis at 3-year follow-up. Likewise, the type of microbiome found as a predictor of the risk of HCC development will be evaluated. It will include 280 patients, 140 in each branch. Basal blood and stool samples will be obtained and every 6 months. The typing and quantification of the microbiome in samples of fecal matter will be carried out by amplifying a specific region (V3-V4) of the bacterial 16s rRNA gene. Likewise, the presence of endotoxins (LPS) and cytokines (IL6, TNF alpha) in plasma will be determined to analyze the immune environment and the expression of the TLR4 receptor in mononuclear cells.