Malnutrition Clinical Trial
Official title:
Paracetamol Hepatotoxicity After Therapeutic Doses: Susceptibility Factors and Early Detection Biomarkers
NCT number | NCT03602274 |
Other study ID # | 13-265 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Recruiting |
Phase | |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | February 10, 2015 |
Est. completion date | December 2018 |
Paracetamol (acetaminophen, APAP) is the most commonly used antipyretic and painkiller worldwide, but also the leading cause of acute liver failure (ALF) in developed countries after supra-therapeutic doses (half overdoses being unintentional). At therapeutic doses (4g/day), up to one third of healthy volunteers develop liver test elevation and cases of ALF have been described in the presence of suggested risk factors such as malnutrition, fasting and low body weight as a result of glutathione depletion. However, no well conducted study has aimed to prospectively assess the impact of malnutrition/fasting on the toxicity to therapeutic doses of APAP. Considering the widespread use of APAP and the prevalence of malnutrition in hospitalized patients (up to 30%), it is of crucial importance to assess whether these patients are at higher risk of hepatotoxicity. It is indeed likely that cases of liver damage secondary to normal recommended dose are under-estimated in these situations as the dose is not perceived as excessive and not described as such in international guidelines for pain management. The primary objective of our project will therefore be to assess if malnutrition and fasting are risk factors for liver toxicity after therapeutic doses (4g/day) of APAP in surgery patients. The second objective will be to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of APAP and metabolites according to nutrition status in order to establish, if necessary, dose reduction guidelines. Developing and validating an early and easily accessible marker of hepatotoxicity would especially be useful in these putative higher risk and fragile populations in order to improve early detection diagnosis and allow earlier management.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 96 |
Est. completion date | December 2018 |
Est. primary completion date | July 2018 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: Age > 18 years-old patient admitted to the orthopedic or visceral surgery department that will be started on an APAP 4 gram per day regimen. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Serum ALT, AST or bilirubin above the ULN before APAP intake 2. More than 20% of the liver involved with metastases 3. Primary hepatocellular carcinoma 4. Known hypersensitivity to APAP 5. Inability to give written informed consent 6. Inability to give blood samples. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Switzerland | Geneva University Hospitals | Geneva |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University Hospital, Geneva |
Switzerland,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Establish a dose reduction guideline according to nutritional status | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | ||
Other | Calculate the prevalence of ALT elevation in study population under therapeutic doses of APAP | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | ||
Primary | Measure association between MNA score and increased risk of liver toxicity | Calculate the statistical association between MNA score and ALT elevation 2x above the patients own baseline | though patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Measure correlation between blood hemoglobin adducts and ALT elevation | Calculate the statistical association between blood hemoglobin adducts concentration (ng/mL) determined by HPLC and ALT elevation 2x above the patients own baseline | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Measure correlation between blood albumine adducts and ALT elevation | Calculate the statistical association between blood albumine adducts concentration (ng/mL) determined by HPLC and ALT elevation 2x above the patients own baseline | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Compare population pharmacokinetics of APAP in function of nutritional status | Measure correlation between blood APAP AUC and nutritional status (MNA, PINI, PG-SGA score or post-op alimentation defined as number of days of fasting following surgery) | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Compare population pharmacokinetics of APAP metabolite in function of nutritional status | Measure correlation between blood APAP metabolite AUC and nutritional status score (MNA, PINI, PG-SGA) or post-op alimentation defined as number of days of fasting following surgery | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Measure association between nutritional status and increased risk of liver toxicity | Calculate the statistical association between PINI, PG-SGA or post-op alimentation defined as number of days of fasting following surgery and ALT elevation 2x above the patients own baseline | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Compare risk of hepatic toxicity in function of CYP450 genotype | Compare blood ALT elevation above the patients' own baseline in function of genotype | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Compare population pharmacokinetics of APAP in function of CYP450 genotype | Compare in APAP AUC in function of genotype | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Compare APAP metabolite AUC in function of CYP450 genotype | Compare in APAP metabolite AUC in function of genotype | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Compare rate of APAP adduct blood levels in function of CYP450 genotype | Compare in APAP adduct AUC in function of genotype | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Compare blood GSH levels in function of nutritional status | Compare blood GSH levels in function of nutritional status (MNA, PINI, PG-SGA score or post-op alimentation defined as number of days of fasting)following surgery | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Compare blood GST activity in function of nutritional status | Compare blood GSH activity in function of nutritional status (MNA, PINI, PG-SGA score or post-op alimentation defined as number of days of fasting)following surgery | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Measure association between GSH levels and blood adduct levels | Calculate the statistical association between GST blood levels and blood adduct AUC | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Measure association between GST blood activity and blood adduct levels | Calculate the statistical association between GST blood activity and blood adduct AUC | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Measure correlation between blood miR122 and ALT elevation | Calculate the statistical association between miR122 relative blood levels and blood ALT elevation above the patients own baseline | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days | |
Secondary | Measure correlation between blood ALT elevation and candidate protein blood concentration isolated through proteomic | Calculate the statistical association between candidate protein biomarkers blood levels and blood ALT elevation above the patients own baseline | through patient hospitalisation max. 14 days |
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