View clinical trials related to Renal Insufficiency, Chronic.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate which clinical and laboratory factors are associated with major adverse cardiovascular event (MACE) in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients on dialysis. The study will also establish a cardiovascular (CV) risk equation appropriate for this dialysis population.
Phase III, multicenter, randomized, open, controlled clinical trial. A study designed as phase III, in 120 patients with chronic renal failure in the pre-dialysis stage, evaluate efficacy and safety of Hemax PFS® (PFS: prefilled syringes) vs the innovator erythropoietin alfa product (Eprex®).
DISCOVER CKD is an international observational cohort study in patients with CKD, comprising both prospective and retrospective patient cohorts. The study does not attempt to test any specific a priori hypotheses, is largely descriptive, and utilises data collected only under conditions of routine clinical care.
Peritoneal dialysis (PD) technology is available but has not been tested in the real world. Therefore, the aim of this study is to test the utility of telemedicine in reducing mortality, hospitalizations, unscheduled visits, and cost derived from preventable complications. Incident patients to PD treatment will be followed from various hospitals in Mexico City and Guadalajara. Direct medical costs will be evaluated, along with unplanned hospital visits and complications over 2 years using the Claria telemedicine apparatus from Baxter Laboratories.
More than 80% of individuals in the U.S. start maintenance hemodialysis (HD) with a central venous catheter, despite substantial evidence that starting HD with an arteriovenous (AV) access improves quality of life, lowers mortality, and decreases healthcare costs. Health system- and patient-level barriers contribute to low rates of AV access creation prior to HD initiation. Evidence-based, pre-dialysis interventions to improve these low rates and associated clinical outcomes are lacking. A Vascular Access Navigation and Education Quality Improvement Program will be implemented in the Geisinger Danville, PA chronic kidney disease clinic. Individuals who choose to participate in a research sub-study of the program will complete questionnaires to assess their vascular access care knowledge and confidence before and after participation in the quality improvement program.
Despite decades of research, the pathogenesis of human diabetic kidney disease remains largely unclear. Our goal is to use archived human kidney biopsy tissue from patients with and with diabetic nephropathy to identify new molecules that drive and/or protect against disease progression. We will use RNA sequencing to identify transcriptomic changes that associate with histologic and functional outcomes.
JTZ-951 is a currently being developed as a treatment for renal anemia. This study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of JTZ-951 following a switch from erythropoiesis-stimulating agent (ESA) in Korean subjects receiving HemoDialysis with renal anemia. This study is a Phase III, open, active-controlled, parallel-group, multi-center study. The total duration of the study will be 30 weeks including screening, treatment and follow-up.
This study is intended to assess the relative bioavailability between the (extended-release) ER8 capsule formulation (the formulation that is currently used for verinurad development) given under fasted conditions and 2 new capsule formulations of verinurad (A-capsule and B-capsule) given under fed or fasted conditions. All three capsules target an 8-hour release profile (extended-release). The highest dose (12 mg) currently tested in participants will be tested in this study. The study is designed to provide information to optimize the verinurad part of a fixed dose combination capsule to be used in future development.
The aims of the proposed studies are first to delineate the physiological response of End Stage Kidney Disease (ESKD) patients to exposure to a bath [HCO3-] of 35 mEq/L and an [acetate] of 4 mEq/L, and second, to determine whether reducing bath [HCO3-] will have the expected effect of decreasing or abolishing stimulation of organic acid production. A secondary endpoint will be whether the patients tolerate such a reduction and its impact on pre-dialysis blood [HCO3-]. If the outcome is positive in both regards, future studies will measure well-being and outcomes with reduced bath [HCO3-].
The study aims to understand why dental infections in end-stage kidney patients results in poor outcomes for kidney functions and eventually transplant. Further, if an active dental treatment is provided to such patients, does it helps improve the kidney functional parameters, and eventually results in better survival of kidney transplant. In addition, the molecular markers that result in altered interactions between the blood cells and bacteria in these patients will be identified and compared with those found in a healthy subjects, or subjects with gum disease but no kidney disease. Besides, if any of the makers of altered interactions found in the blood can be found to be altered in the saliva samples from the patients with gum disease (periodontitis), and kidney disease, it will help to develop a non-invasive oral risk test for predicting outcomes of kidney transplant survival.