View clinical trials related to Chronic Liver Disease.
Filter by:This study seeks to determine how COVID-19 affects the clinical outcome of patients with chronic liver disease, and whether the clinical course of COVID-19 is influenced by underlying chronic liver disease.
Serial combination of biological and elastography tests is accurate to diagnosing advanced fibrosis in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) patients. In this study, the investigators compared the diagnostic performances of a 2-step strategy using either vibration-controlled transient elastography (VCTE) or bidimensional shear wave elastography with Supersonic imagine (2D-SWE-SSI), and analysed the added-value of a 3-step strategy.
The purpose of this study is to assess the reliability, reproducibility and accuracy of the paediatric probe of transient elastography in detecting liver fibrosis in children, besides its limitations and side effects. At the same time, to assess whether indirect fibrosis markers are a valid tool to detect absence or mild fibrosis in paediatric patients
Loss of muscle mass (sarcopenia) is a major complication in a patient with cirrhosis, impacting the disease outcome, quality of life and survival. Cirrhotics lose muscle mass (MM) while waiting for liver transplant (LT) and even after LT, impacting the outcome of LT. Moreover, LT is elusive for majority of patients in India. The pathophysiology of muscle loss is complicated, multifactorial, interlinked and primarily nutrition driven, which gives clues for targeted therapeutic modalities other than feeding alone. Experimental studies have instilled faith in BCAA in successfully counteracting the pathogenesis of muscle loss. But there is lack of convincing data from clinical studies with direct evidence on muscle growth per se.
A Phase 1a, Double Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Single-Center, Single and Multiple Ascending Dose Study to Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability Pharmacokinetics, and Pharmacodynamics of BLD-0409 in Healthy Volunteers
Pirfenidone (PFD), an oral antifibrotic drug with anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant properties, has been granted marketing authorization by the European Medicine Agency and FDA, for the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). However, few studies have focused on its clinical utilization in patients with advanced hepatic fibrosis. Therefore, Investigators aim to evaluate a prolonged-release PFD formulation (PR-PFD) plus standard of care management on disease progression in patients with advanced liver fibrosis (ALF). Methods: Patients with diverse chronic liver disease etiology (alcohol-related, hepatitis B or C, autoimmune or fatty liver disease) will be screened with two non invasive liver fibrosis methods (Fibroscan®) and Fibro Test®) and those with ALF (F3 or F4) will be treated for at least 12 months with PR-PFD. Antifibrotic effects Will be assessed at 6 and 12 months; variations greater than 30% in estimated fibrosis scores or 1 point on the METAVIR scale will be considered clinically significant. PFD plasma levels, serum endothelin-1, IL6, TNFα and TGFβ1, Quality of life and fatigue scales will be evaluated. Parametric and non parametric statistics will be utilized and p values lower tan 5% will be considered clinically significant.
Subject will be randomize in two groups. Group A will receive drug packets containing 2.5 gm sodium benzoate and 5 gm powdered table sugar for 5days.Since the dosage of Sodium Benzoate is Sta t250mg/Kg and then 250mg/Kg in next 24 hours, each patient would be given 750mg /kg stat and 750mg /kg in next 24 hours,keeping in view that 2/3 of powder used would be powdered sugar in the intervention arm. The dose of the powder used would be doubled in case of the ammonia level more than 300 mcg/dl. The drug will be prepared in sterile water and administered per orally or via the nasogastric tube. All the enrolled patients would be treated with SMT as per the recommendations of the EASL/AASLD 2014 guidelines of management of hepatic encephalopathy. Group B will receive 7.5 gm packets of powdered table sugar for 5 days as placebo which is similar in appearance and taste as sodium benzoate.
Mental disorders have been shown to be associated with a number of general medical conditions (also referred to as somatic or physical conditions). The investigators aim to undertake a comprehensive study of comorbidity among those with treated mental disorders, by using high-quality Danish registers to provide age- and sex-specific pairwise estimates between the ten groups of mental disorders and nine groups of general medical conditions. The investigators will examine the association between all 90 possible pairs of prior mental disorders and later GMC categories using the Danish national registers. Depending on whether individuals are diagnosed with a specific mental disorder, the investigators will estimate the risk of receiving a later diagnosis within a specific GMC category, between the start of follow-up (January 1, 2000) or at the earliest age at which a person might develop the mental disorder, whichever comes later. Follow-up will be terminated at onset of the GMC, death, emigration from Denmark, or December 31, 2016, whichever came first. Additionally for dyslipidemia, follow-up will be ended if a diagnosis of ischemic heart disease was received. A "wash-out" period will be employed in the five years before follow-up started (1995-1999), to identify and exclude prevalent cases from the analysis. Individuals with the GMC of interest before the observation period will be considered prevalent cases and excluded from the analyses (i.e. prevalent cases were "washed-out"). When estimating the risk of a specific GMC, the investigators will consider all individuals to be exposed or unexposed to the each mental disorder depending on whether a diagnosis is received before the end of follow-up. Persons will be considered unexposed to a mental disorder until the date of the first diagnosis, and exposed thereafter.
Chronic liver diseases (CLDs) represent a major worldwide public health burden. Worldwide estimations show that 844 million people have CLDs, a lot more than other chronic diseases such as diabetes or cardiovascular diseases. CLD is most of the time an asymptomatic, progressive, and potentially fatal disease. With its complications it becomes one of the major causes of mortality worldwide. Globally, hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus, alcoholic liver disease and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, are the most important causes of liver disease. The diagnosis of liver lesions remains an important issue for these patients. The prognosis and management of liver disease greatly depends on the amount of liver fibrosis. In early stages, it is the main factor predicting long-term outcome of these patients. The liver biopsy still represents the gold standard diagnostic tool for liver fibrosis assessment, although a wide spectrum of noninvasive tools are now commonly used as a surrogate to the liver biopsy. It includes direct and indirect serum markers of liver fibrosis, but also several imaging-based methods, including transient elastography (FibroScan®, Echosens, Paris, France). Even if the liver fibrosis is the key pathological feature of progressive liver disease, the accumulation of excessive hepatic triglyceride, hepatic steatosis, is today recognized as an important factor in the pathogenesis of a number of CLD. The magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques are sensitive to steatosis and show interesting diagnostic performances, especially the MRI using the proton density fat fraction (MRI-PDFF) which has shown at least equivalence in accuracy for quantifying hepatic steatosis with both 1H Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy and with histological grade, across several studies. Therefore, this technique is now part of the gold standard diagnostic tool to establish the grade of hepatic steatosis. Echosens has developed an ultrasonic controlled attenuation parameter (CAP) designed to quantify hepatic steatosis using a process based on vibration controlled transient elastography (VCTE™). Echosens is working on improving the diagnostic accuracy of the CAP measurement performed with the FibroScan. This protocol is set-up to compare the diagnostic performances of the first generation of the CAP and the second generation of the CAP to the reference, the MRI-PDFF, in patients with CLD, all etiologies combined.
The purpose of this study is to validate the Disease Severity Index (DSI) from the HepQuant SHUNT Liver Diagnostic Kit (Test) for likelihood of large esophageal varices.