View clinical trials related to Renal Insufficiency, Chronic.
Filter by:A Multicenter, Randomized, Open-labeled, Cross-over, Active-controlled, Phase IV Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Preference of Formulation and the Efficacy and Safety of Renamezin and Kremezin in Pre-dialysis Patients With Chronic Renal Failure
A multicenter, randomized, open-label, active-controlled Phase 3 study for the maintenance treatment of anemia in participants with Non-dialysis-dependent Chronic Kidney Disease (NDD-CKD)
This was a randomized, double-blind, parallel group, placebo-controlled study, in two sequential parts that evaluated the renal safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of LHW090 in patients with moderately impaired renal function.
This study aims to determine the effects of end-stage renal disease on the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, safety, and tolerability of apixaban. This is a single-center open-label pharmacological study. Apixaban will be prescribed at the dose of 2.5 mg twice per day for nine days. The concentration of the drug will be measured with repetitive blood tests the first and the eighth day of administration (non-dialysis days). The same blood tests will be repeated before, during, and after dialysis on dialysis days. If the study shows inadequate or suboptimal efficacy with the 2.5 mg dose, it will be repeated with the 5 mg twice-daily dose.
Over 20 million people in North America (including 2 million Canadians) have chronic kidney disease. These individuals die from diseases of the heart and blood vessels more often than they need dialysis. This is due to hardening of the arteries caused by calcium deposits inside the blood vessel walls. These deposits damage the vessels, causing them to lose flexibility. This makes them unable to respond to the changing demands of the body, and eventually leads to blockages such as stroke and ultimately death. High levels of phosphate in the blood have been consistently linked to the development of calcium deposits inside blood vessel walls. The kidney is the only organ in the body that can eliminate phosphate that is not required by the body. As kidney function becomes worse, body levels of phosphate increase. However, investigators do not know the time point in the course of kidney disease that problems begin in the way phosphate is eliminated into the urine by the kidneys. Investigators will test the response of the kidneys to a phosphate challenge taken by mouth in subjects who are having accurate measures of kidney function performed by a method called 'inulin clearance'. The investigators believe that the results of this study will provide important information identifying when investigators should be concerned about body levels of phosphate increasing. This information may lead to changes in the way investigators treat patients by reducing the levels of phosphate in the diet at a much earlier time point then is presently recommended.
The multicenter registry will collect clinical data from 1600 patients with non valvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF) and chronic kidney disease (eGFR 15-49 mL/min per 1.73 m2). The overall objective of this registry is to assess chronic kidney disease (CKD) progression and clinical outcomes with regard to anticoagulation strategies in NVAF patients with eGFR 15-49 mL/min per 1.73 m2 in routine clinical practice.
While there are proven therapies that slow CKD progression, these therapies can at times be harmful and costly. The ability to accurately predict the risk of CKD progression to ESRD would be extremely valuable. The short term versus lifetime risk of CKD progression should be taken into account when making risk based clinical decisions. In a representative CKD practice, the investigators compared the short term and lifetime risk assessment in our stage 3 CKD patients to determine whether decisions based on a short term risk assessment would underestimate the lifetime risk of CKD progression. The investigators also applied the short term risk assessment to our stage 4 CKD patients to determine the frequency with which ESRD risk may be overestimated in CKD stage 4.
This is a randomized, multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of the treatment of anemia in subjects with CKD not on dialysis, with treatment up to 52 weeks.
This is a randomized, multicenter, open-label, active-controlled study of the treatment of anemia in subjects with CKD on dialysis, with treatment up to 52 weeks.
The purpose of this study is to characterise the patient and disease profile under the influence of a protein-restricted diet supplemented with keto acids/amino acids (KA/AA), focusing on the progression of chronic renal insufficiency, calcium and phosphorus metabolism, nutritional status, patient compliance to diet and Ketosteril intake as well as the persistent dietary education to ensure compliance in a large group of pre-dialysis patients.