View clinical trials related to Renal Insufficiency.
Filter by:This is a two phase study. The first part will take place at the National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico, the second phase will be made in collaboration with the University of California San Diego. This is a non blind experimental study, 60 patients with different stages of CKD from the outpatient unit of the institute will be included. Each patient will receive a furosemide stress test of 1 mg/kg in non diuretic users and 1.5 mg/kg in diuretic users, in addition to an oral load of 5 grams of creatinine, as well as Iohexol to measure GFR. After the intervention blood and urine samples will be drawn at 10 minutes, 30 minutes, and every hour until the completion of the observation at 6 hours. Blood and urine will be analized to measure creatinine (blood and urine), then samples will be processed for measurement of furosemide (mass spectometry), indoxyl sulphate, p-cresol, hippurate, and uromoduline. The aim of this stiudy is to asses the differences between GFR and proximal tubule function.
This is a multicenter, open-label parallel-group to evaluate single oral doses of INCB000928 in participants with varying level of renal function or impairment.
This long-term follow-up study is a 5-year long-term follow-up study to evaluate long-term safety in Cellgram-CKD subjects. (refer to ClinicalTrials.gov.Identifier: NCT05042206).
To investigate the pharmacokinetics (PK) of rifabutin in subjects with renal impairment after single intravenous (IV) infusion of BV100
A 9-month randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to compare the effect of fixed dose ferric citrate versus placebo in patients with advanced chronic kidney disease (eGFR ≤20 ml/min/1.73m2) on the composite endpoint of time to initiation of maintenance dialysis or all-cause mortality.
The occurrence of renal failure during severe forms of COVID-19 is common (20-35% of patients treated in intensive care) and associated with an unfavorable short-term prognosis, but the medium-term renal outcome is not is not known. The aim of the study is to establish the frequency of chronic kidney failure after AKI KDIGO 2 and 3 occurring during severe COVID-19 in intensive care.
This purpose of this study is to compare the pharmacokinetics (PK) of a single dose of MK-0616 in participants with moderate renal impairment (RI) to those of healthy matched control participants. This study is being conducted to assess the impact of moderate renal insufficiency on the PK of MK-0616.
This cross-sectional pilot study will examine the blood clotting patterns in children with chronic kidney disease stages 3, 4, and 5. A total of 30 participants will be enrolled with 10 participants for each stage of chronic kidney disease. Blood specimens will be collected from each participant during a routine clinic visit, and will then be processed to evaluate blood clotting characteristics according to thrombelastography and more conventional clotting tests.
Researchers in this study want to learn how a new contrast agent for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) called BAY1747846 moves into, through and out of the body (pharmacokinetics) after injection in participants with normal and impaired renal function. Impaired renal function is a condition where the kidneys do not work as well as they should. BAY1747846 belongs to the class gadolinium-based contrast agents (GBCAs). The way the body removes GBCAs including BAY1747846 from the blood is through the kidneys. So, when the kidneys are not working normally, it takes longer to remove BAY1747846 out of the body. The participants in this study will either have normal renal function, or will have mild or moderate impaired renal function. The participants will receive BAY1747846 one time through a needle into a vein. During the study, the participants will visit the study site about 6 times. The participants will stay at the study site for up to 9 days. Each participant will be in the study for up to 7 months. During the study, the doctors will: - check the participants' overall health - take blood and urine samples - ask the participants about what medications they are taking and what adverse events they are having An adverse event is any medical problem that a participant has during a study. Doctors keep track of all adverse events that happen in studies, even if they do not think the adverse events might be related to the study treatments.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of Sodium Zirconium Cyclosilicate (SZC), as adjunct to ACEi/ARB therapy (lisinopril or valsartan), on slowing CKD progression (assessed as the reduction in participant's glomerular filtration rate [eGFR] decline over time) in participants with hyperkalaemia or at high risk of hyperkalaemia.