View clinical trials related to Chronic Kidney Disease.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the hemoglobin response (efficacy), safety, and tolerability of orally administered AKB-6548 in participants with Chronic Kidney Disease (pre-dialysis) with anemia with dosing for 20 weeks.
The study is aiming to document the safety and effectiveness of renal denervation in patients after renal transplantation with hypertension. Catheter-based renal denervation will be performed using CE marked, percutaneous Symplicity catheter.
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate that treatment with etelcalcetide (AMG 416) is not inferior to treatment with cinacalcet for lowering serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels by > 30% from baseline among patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) who require management with hemodialysis.
The dietary restriction of proteins and sodium is a cornerstone in the treatment of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and of its metabolic consequences. Dietary adjustments in CKD are complex and the patients' compliance is very low. A dietary interview method is a validated instrument to evaluate the patients' compliance; however, it the presence of a dedicated dietitians. For these reasons, and because of the absence of dedicated dietitians in many nephrology centres, it is usual practice to give standard low protein diets to CKD patients not on dialysis. Aim of this study was to verify if few simple tips were able to reduce protein, phosphate and sodium intake in patients with CKD, as compared to the practice of giving a low protein diet elaborated by a renal dietitian.
Anemia is a common complication in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). In addition to erythropoietin deficiency, many studies have identified iron deficiency as a cause of anemia in CKD patients. Most patients with CKD are iron deficient because of: inadequate intake and absorption, gastroenteric bleeding, urinary iron loss in patient with significant proteinuria. The iron treatment is pivotal to manage anemic patients with CKD: the prescription of iron is usually oral because of practicality and safety, but often it is inevitable to administer intravenous iron because of gastroenteric malabsorption, intolerance to oral administration, irregular intake. There're few randomized controlled studies about the efficacy of oral iron versus intravenous iron in patients not on dialysis; most of them demonstrate superiority of intravenous therapy to restore iron deficiency and hemoglobin levels. A particular formulation of iron, liposomal iron has a high gastroenteric absorption and high bioavailability with lower incidence of side effects. The investigators study aims to evaluate the efficacy of treatment with liposomal oral iron compared to intravenous iron in CKD anemic patients not on dialysis in the presence of iron deficiency.
The primary objective of this study is to assess in a post-approval clinical setting the safety profile of sevelamer carbonate (Renvela®) tablets and powder in adult hyperphosphataemic chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients not on dialysis with serum phosphorus ≥1.78 mmol/L. Patients will be treated in accordance with the Renvela® Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) and followed according to the investigator's standard clinical practice management. Each patient will be followed up for 12 months or up to the time they start dialysis, whichever occurs first.
The aim of this study is to assess whether renal denervation (RD) added to usual care compared to usual care alone reduces blood pressure (BP) as determined with ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) after 6 months in subjects with an average day-time systolic BP of at least 135 mmHg as determined with use of ABPM, despite use of three or more BP lowering agents or with documented intolerance or contraindication for to 2 or more of the 4 major classes of antihypertensive drugs (ACEi/ARB, calcium channel blockers, betablockers and diuretics) obstructing use of 3 antihypertensives Further aims are to assess the effect of renal denervation on the use of BP lowering agents, to explore the effect of renal denervation in strata of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) (eGFR 20-60 mL/min per 1.73m2 and eGFR>60 mL/min per 1.73m2) and according to baseline office BP. Randomization will be stratified by hospital and eGFR and will be at a 2:1 ratio.
The purpose of this study is to determine if the study drug is safe, tolerable and active in reducing albuminuria in patients with Chronic Kidney Disease with Type 2 Diabetes.
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a debilitating condition in which there is a gradual decline of renal function associated with increased overall mortality. Most dietary guidelines for CKD focus on limiting protein intake (nitrogen) and high phosphorus-containing foods. However, increasing dietary fiber has been proposed to increase fecal nitrogen excretion which may ameliorate the progress of CKD. We therefore plan to conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis on clinical trials to assess the effect of fiber on urea and creatinine as classical markers of a state of uremia in individuals with CKD. We hypothesize that increasing fiber intakes will improve urea and creatinine levels in individuals with CKD.
The primary objective of this study is to compare the change in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) from baseline to Week 8 between placebo and GCS-100 treatment. The secondary objective is to determine the safety and tolerability of GCS-100 administered for 8 weeks relative to placebo. In addition, the study will measure the effect of GCS-100 on circulating galectin-3 and other markers of disease activity.