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Cirrhosis, Liver clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05729438 Recruiting - Cirrhosis, Liver Clinical Trials

Nutritional Assesment in Patients With Cirrhosis

Start date: January 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aims to evaluated nutritional status in patiets with cirrhosis

NCT ID: NCT05700708 Recruiting - Acute Kidney Injury Clinical Trials

Point-of-Care Echocardiography to Assess Impact of Dynamic Cardiac Function, Renal and Cardiac Biomarkers in Cirrhosis With Refractory Ascites

Start date: November 15, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Point-of-care echocardiography (POC-Echo) is used to determine left ventricular systolic and diastolic dysfunction (LVDD), inferior vena cava (IVC) dynamics and volume status in cirrhosis and Acute-on-chronic liver failure ACLF accurately. We will assess IVC dynamics, LV systolic function [LV ejection fraction (EF) & cardiac output (CO)], and diastolic dysfunction (E/e', e' and E/A ratio) and urinary biomarkers (cystatin C and NGAL) in patients with cirrhosis and Refractory Ascites.

NCT ID: NCT05698134 Recruiting - Cirrhosis, Liver Clinical Trials

Rotational Thromboelastometry (ROTEM™) Guided Transfusion for Elective Procedures in Patients With Cirrhosis (REduCe): An Open Label Randomized Controlled Trial.

REduCe
Start date: August 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

REDuCe is designed to evaluate the role of ROTEM™ in determining the need and the amount of pre-emptive blood products use in patients with cirrhosis undergoing elective procedures compared to the current standard of care. The secondary aim of this study is to evaluate ROTEM™ parameters in patients with acute decompensation, acute on chronic liver failure and acute liver failure and to co-relate it with the conventional coagulation tests.

NCT ID: NCT05687409 Completed - Cirrhosis, Liver Clinical Trials

Synbiotics Interventions for Managing Cirrhosis and Its Complications

Start date: November 24, 2019
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Background Liver cirrhosis is commonly accompanied by intestinal dysbiosis and metabolic defects. Many clinical trials have shown microbiota-targeting strategies represent promising interventions for managing cirrhosis and its complications. However, the influences of the intestinal metagenomes and metabolic profiles of patients have not been fully elucidated. Methods administered lactulose, Clostridium butyricum, and Bifidobacterium longum infantis as a synbiotic and used shotgun metagenomics and non-targeted metabolomics to characterize the results.

NCT ID: NCT05683548 Available - Clinical trials for Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Replicor Compassionate Access Program

RCAP
Start date: n/a
Phase:
Study type: Expanded Access

The goal of this compassionate access program is to provide early access to REP 2139-Mg for patients with HBV mono-infection or HBV / HDV co-infection who either have advanced (decompensated) cirrhosis or who have failed to response to other other antiviral agents either approved or under development and who are in danger of progressing to decompensated cirrhosis. This compassionate access program will provide access to a once weekly regimen of subcutaneously (SC) administered REP 2139-Mg for a period of 48 weeks with the goal of achieving functional cure of HDV and or HBV, with the reversal of liver disease in the absence of antiviral therapy. The safety, tolerability and efficacy of SC REP 2139-Mg will be monitored during and after therapy

NCT ID: NCT05651789 Not yet recruiting - Portal Hypertension Clinical Trials

Carvedilol vs. Propranolol in Second Prophylaxis of Variceal Bleeding

Start date: January 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This randomized controlled trial was conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of carvedilol versus propranolol, combined with routine endoscopic treatment, in the secondary prophylaxis of variceal bleeding in patients with cirrhosis.

NCT ID: NCT05623150 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Hepatocellular Carcinoma

CHronic Hepatopathies Associated With ALcohol Consumption aNd metAbolic Syndrome

CHALNA2
Start date: December 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The aim is to determine the metabolic factors, host immune factors, and medical imaging data associated with the development of HepatoCellular Carcinoma (HCC) in patients with alcohol-related liver disease or dysmetabolic steatosis/Non-Alcoholic SteatoHepatitis. The investigators will include patients with and without cirrhosis in order to identify early molecular mechanisms involved in the development of HCC especially in non-cirrhotic patients.

NCT ID: NCT05604274 Recruiting - Cirrhosis, Liver Clinical Trials

Longitudinal Monitoring of Stool Characteristics

Start date: October 28, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In patients with cirrhosis and healthy controls to determine the utility of an App to classify BSS compared to assessment made by the patients themselves using the BSS and correlate these with other stool characteristics and gut microbiota.

NCT ID: NCT05583539 Withdrawn - Cirrhosis, Liver Clinical Trials

Thromboelastography Guided Blood Product Transfusion for Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding in Cirrhosis

STRATEGIC
Start date: January 16, 2025
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to compare resuscitation strategies in patients with cirrhosis and gastrointestinal bleeding. The main question it aims to answer is whether thromboelastography guided resuscitation decreased the amount of fresh frozen plasma patients receive. Patients will receive blood products guided by thromboelastography in the intervention group. Researchers will compare the patients who undergo thromboelastography guided resuscitation to those who receive usual care to see which strategy leads to the use of less blood products, specifically less fresh frozen plasma.

NCT ID: NCT05551884 Recruiting - Portal Hypertension Clinical Trials

Non-invasive Diagnosis of Portal Hypertension in Cirrhosis Based on Metabolomics Technology

Start date: February 15, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Portal hypertension (PH) is a group of syndromes characterized by abnormal changes in the portal blood flow system, mostly caused by cirrhosis. It is an important factor affecting the clinical prognosis of cirrhotic patients, and its severity determines the occurrence and development of cirrhotic complications. Clinically, measurement of portal venous pressure directly is highly invasive, and factors such as intra-abdominal pressure changes can interfere with the results, limiting its clinical application. Hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) is the gold standard for assessing PH in cirrhosis. The normal range of HVPG is 3~5 mmHg, and HVPG ≥5 mmHg indicates the presence of PH. AASLD stated that HVPG ≥10 mmHg is defined as clinically significant portal hypertension (CSPH), and the risk of decompensation events is significantly increased at this stage. However, HVPG is an invasive test, which is unacceptable to some patients, such as being expensive, difficult to repeat, and poor patient compliance. Non-invasive tests for PH include serological tests, anatomical imaging and combination models. Imaging evidence of portal collateral circulation or hepatic blood flow in the portal venous system based on ultrasound Doppler, CT or magnetic resonance imaging techniques can assist to diagnose PH. In addition, elastography techniques such as transient elastography, point shear wave elastography, two-dimensional shear wave elastography and magnetic resonance elastography can be used to measure liver stiffness and spleen stiffness to assess PH. Some biochemical markers are also considered as non-invasive tests for PH. However, the available biomarkers are not yet a substitute for the HVPG accurately, and therefore, there is an urgent need for the development of biomarkers associated with HVPG in clinical practice. Metabolomics is a method to analyze the concentrated changes of endogenous small molecule metabolites under the combined effect of genetic, biological and environmental factors with the help of various high-throughput technologies. Metabolites are at the end of the biological information flow, and their changes are the ultimate expression of the information from the coordinated action of each group, objectively reflecting the overall changes of the organism. Currently, metabolomics techniques have been widely used in screening biomarkers of liver diseases. Wang et al. applied GC-TOF/MS and UPLC-QTOF/MS to study the urinary metabolomics of patients with hepatitis B cirrhosis and showed that α-hydroxymaurolate, tyrosine-betaine, 3-hydroxyisovaleric acid, knife-serine succinate, estrone and GUDCA were significantly altered in different Child-Pugh grades of cirrhosis, suggesting that these metabolites are potential biomarkers to identify different pathological stages of cirrhosis. Therefore, metabolomics is a reliable and valid tool for biomarker discovery. In conclusion, this study analyzed significantly altered metabolites in patients with hepatitis B cirrhosis using metabolomics to explore potential differential metabolites that are highly correlated with HVPG. Further, serological biomarkers were identified as an alternative to HVPG testing through model construction and validation.