View clinical trials related to Cirrhosis, Liver.
Filter by:Exploring and establishing new non-invasive risk stratification techniques for portal hypertension based on E imaging technology for measuring liver and spleen stiffness is an urgent need in this field of research.
Non-alcoholic hepatic steatosis (NAFLD) is characterised by the excessive accumulation of triglycerides in the liver and is often associated, in the absence of significant alcohol consumption, with insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome with which it shares the most frequent clinical manifestations (hypertension, dyslipidaemia, visceral adiposity, glucose intolerance). Due to the pandemic spread of obesity and diabetes and by virtue of better control of viral hepatitis, NAFLD is the most common cause of liver damage in Western countries with a prevalence of around 20-30% of the general population. The clinical impact of NAFLD in diabetes is considerable and represents a real driver of the major clinical outcomes that impact on the health of the individual, consequently creating a real 'burden of disease' especially in those populations considered to be at higher risk of disease severity. Individuals with diabetes are, in fact, those at greatest risk of developing the clinical sequelae of NAFLD and often do not receive adequate hepatological support and a correct hepatic pathology. In fact, it has been documented in the literature that the presence of diabetes increases the severity of liver damage, bringing the risk of NASH up to 80% and increasing the risk of significant fibrosis to 30-40% of subjects with hepatic steatosis as well as representing an independent predictor for significant fibrosis. Lastly, the increased risk of hepatocarcinoma in subjects with diabetes and NAFLD should not be overlooked, as documented by our group and confirmed in a large Italian case series. In subjects with diabetes, moreover, the presence of NAFLD is not only associated with worse glycaemic control, but also with micro- and macro-vascular complications as well as nephrological and neuropathic complications and increased mortality. Therefore, the possibility of applying the non-invasive fibrosis scores currently available for NAFLD on a large scale, in a population at high risk of progressive liver disease, would make it possible to characterise (a) the true epidemiology of significant fibrosis (F3 or higher); (b) allow primary prevention actions to be carried out by optimising the use of resources or by identifying subjects at greater risk of damage progression; (c) understand, in cases with a long history of disease the true prevalence of clinical outcomes; (d) understand the epidemiology of comorbidities and polypharmacy as a function of significant fibrosis.
The study is a single-center, single-arm, open-label, dose-escalation clinical study, to evaluate the tolerability, safety and preliminary efficacy of CUD005 injection in patients with cirrhosis
This is a controlled, observational clinical study initiated by investigators to investigate the efficacy and safety of sulfasalazine in the treatment of cirrhosis in patients with cirrhosis. Four cohorts were planned: primary biliary cirrhosis, hepatitis B and C cirrhosis, and alcoholic cirrhosis. The four groups were divided into experimental group and control group, and the experimental group: each group of patients was orally treated sulfasalazine for 12 months, taken three times a day, each time taking 0.5g. The control group did not take sulfasalazine. After 12 months, changes in fecal flora and metabolites before and after the use of sulfasalazine were observed.
This will be a multicenter, double-blind clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of two doses of prolonged release pirfenidone, compared against placebo plus conventional therapy in patients with compensated liver cirrhosis. The study will be conducted in compliance with International Standard good clinical practices (GCPs) and the Declaration of Helsinki. The protocol is approved by a local Institutional Review Board and registered in clinical trials.gov.
The aim of these study to determine the prevalence of hepatitis Delta virus (HDV) infections and the prognosis of HDV patients in Turkey's southeast. The investigators intend to arrange training sessions for 250 family physicians in Diyarbakir, Batman, Mardin, and Sanliurfa in order to determine those goals. The investigators will talk about diagnosing hepatitis B virus (HBV), HDV, hepatitis C virus (HCV), and Human Immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections during these events. To ensure that patients with simultaneous HDV infection are evaluated for HIV/HCV and to detect liver fibrosis with a non-invasive method.
The goal of clinical trial is to compare using pedometer in sarcopenic cirrhotic patients. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Did the encourage using pedometer group had higher change of skeletal muscle index (SMI) than discourage using pedometer group? 2. How many of patients who had sarcopenic improvement in both groups at 6 months after enrollment? 3. What is the mortality rate and hospital admission in both groups at 12 months after enrollment?
The investigators aim to study the predictive value of presepsin in ascites in newly admitted patients with chronic liver failure.
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about an intensive monitoring plan (transitional care program) in patients with cirrhosis and excessive swelling that are going to be discharged from the hospital. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - How much time and what resources are needed to run such a program - How well do patients follow up with the phone calls, bloodwork, and doctor appointments? - Do the patients enrolled in the program have less need for hospitalization later, less kidney injury, better fluid control, and/or better survival compared to patients that are not in the program? Participants will - Be given a digital scale and a binder with educational material and a log to monitor their weights after discharge from the hospital - Receive a phone call from the study team within 72 hours of discharge and weekly - Be given a follow up appointment with hepatology within 4 weeks of discharge Researchers will compare participants in this program to patients that receive normal care to see if there are differences in need for hospitalization later, kidney injury, fluid control, and/or survival.
The goal of this prospective, double blind randomized clinical trial is to compare the effectiveness of two interventions in improve frailty (measured by Liver Frailty Index) and quality of life (measured by Chronic Liver Disease Questionnaire - CLDQ) in listed patients with cirrhosis. The main questions it aims to answer are: - if the intervention group (physical and nutritional therapy) could improve LFI over control group (physical and nutritional counseling). - if the intervention group could improve secondary outcomes as CLDQ, hand grip and gait velocity. Participants will be evaluated in a registry of basal variables such as demographic factors, weight, height and brachial circumference, comorbidities, MELD and MELD-Na, Child Pugh classification, general blood exams, etiology of cirrhosis, presence of hepatocellular carcinoma, ascites, or hepatic encephalopathy and their basal LFI, gait velocity, hand grip and CLDQ. The participants will be randomized in an intervention group or in a control group at the same time of their first evaluation and will receive the group instructions depending on what group the participants belong, and will be evaluated at 4 weeks, 8 weeks, and 12 weeks with applying LFI, measuring of gait velocity, hand grip and a nutritional survey with the intake in the last 24 hours. Finally, researchers will compare interventional group with control group if the first group could improve frailty, measured by Liver Frailty Index and the secondary outcomes with the nutritional and physical therapy.