View clinical trials related to Compensated Cirrhosis.
Filter by:The Effect of Hepatic Impairment on The Pharmacokinetics of Seladelpar: An Open-Label Study Following Oral Dosing of Seladelpar to Subjects with Primary Biliary Cholangitis (PBC) and Hepatic Impairment (HI)
This study is to investigate the clinical efficacy and safety of three types of nucleotide/nucleoside analogues in treatment of hepatitis b virus related compensated cirrhosis.
Variceal hemorrhage is a lethal complication in patients with cirrhosis and portal hypertension. Identification of varices needing treatment in compensated cirrhosis is, therefore, of great therapeutic and prognostic importance. The gold standard for diagnosing gastroesophageal varices and evaluating the risk of variceal hemorrhage is esophagogastroduodenoscopy. According to the Baveno VI consensus, for those with high-risk varices (HRV), either non-selective beta blockers or endoscopic band ligation is recommended for the prevention of the first variceal bleeding. However, the invasiveness and uncomfortableness during the esophagogastroduodenoscopy procedure has hindered its use in clinical practice, especially in patients with compensated cirrhosis. Sufficient accurate non-invasive tools for detection of HRV are warranted to safely avoid the use of esophagogastroduodenoscopy. Advanced technologies including next-generation sequencing and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry have the potential to be applied in this field. The latter is a widespread adopted tool in clinical microbiology for rapid, accurate and cost-effective identification of cultured bacteria and fungi. Recently, microbiome and peptidome have been proved their roles in the end-stage liver disease (e.g. cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma), which may exhibit predictive capacity of HRV. In the present study, the investigators aim to conduct a prospective, multicenter diagnostic trial in 12 sites in China, 1 site in Turkey and 1 site in Thailand to evaluate the diagnostic performance of the microbiome/peptidome-based model for HRV detection in compensated cirrhosis.
Study Design and Methodology - Study Population:Compensated Cirrhosis - Study Design: An Ambi Prospective Cohort study - Study Period: 2 Years - Sample size: Retrospective- All patients from Jan 2010 to Mar 2017 Prospective- Assuming the incidence of clinical decompensation is 5%/year.With alpha of 5%, power 80% we need to enroll 138 cases. Further assuming 20% drop out 166 cases will be enrolled. - Intervention: This is an observational study. No intervention will be given. Monitoring and assessment: All the routine investigation and clinical information will be collected at 6, 12,18 and 24 months.