View clinical trials related to Diabetic Nephropathies.
Filter by:The purpose of this trial is to investigate the feasibility and safety of implementing a protocol-based treatment aggressively targeting albuminuria in subjects with biopsy-proven diabetic nephropathy and severely elevated albuminuria. If this approach is feasible, the results of the trial will inform the design of a large-scale randomized clinical trial to evaluate the effect of this treatment on hard kidney endpoints (initiation of dialysis, kidney transplantation, and death from kidney failure) in subjects with biopsy-proven diabetic nephropathy and severely elevated albuminuria.
Diabetes nephropathy (DN) is one of the most serious microvascular complications of diabetes, and also an important cause of death and disability of diabetes patients. There is no specific clinical staging of type 2 diabetes nephropathy at home and abroad, and there is no comprehensive study to comprehensively describe the occurrence and development of type 2 diabetes nephropathy through sensitive biomarkers, microvascular disease imaging and functional detection, digital markers and other multi-dimensional diagnosis and evaluation methods. Therefore, our research aims to establish a long-term follow-up queue for the whole cycle of diabetes nephropathy, develop multi-dimensional diagnostic and progress digital markers for diabetes nephropathy, develop a multimodal non-invasive diagnostic model and a new clinical staging/typing, and create a multi-dimensional accurate diagnosis and treatment system for type 2 diabetes nephropathy combining traditional Chinese and western medicine.
Predictors of Chronic Kidney Disease among Type 2 Diabetic Patients in Assiut University Hospitals.
The primary objective of this study is to determine the effects of semaglutide on kidney oxygenation and function in type 1 diabetes. The secondary objective is to determine the glycemic effects and safety of semaglutide in type 1 diabetes.
The goal of this observational study is to learn about the role of Time-in-Range to stratify the risk of micro vascular complications in adults with type 2 diabetes. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Is a lower Time-in-Range associated with a higher risk of diabetes microvascular complications, independent of HbA1c? 2. Is Time-in-Range lower among sulfonylurea and premixed insulin therapy users compared to non-sulfonylurea and non-premixed insulin therapy users, respectively.
A phase 2a trial randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group trial to determine whether NMN administration improves DKD, as indicated by a significantly greater reduction in UACR compared with placebo administration. Eligible participants will be randomized to receive either 1000 mg NMN or placebo twice daily.
Hypertension is the most common complication in patients with diabetes nephropathy. Strengthening blood pressure and blood sugar control is the basic treatment for patients with diabetes nephropathy. Angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI) are the first line drugs recommended in domestic and international guidelines for diabetes patients to control hypertension. As a new ARB drug, azilsartan has been found to have better antihypertensive effect than other ARB drugs. However, due to the limited sample size and study time, azilsartan has no significant advantage over other ARB drugs in terms of renal protection effect, and has not been systematically studied in diabetes nephropathy population. This study is intended to evaluate the effect of azilsartan on proteinuria and blood pressure improvement in patients with diabetes nephropathy and hypertension through clinical randomized controlled study, so as to accumulate evidence-based evidence of azilsartan in the comprehensive management of heart and kidney protection in this group of people, and promote the development of comprehensive treatment for patients with metabolic disease and renal injury combined with hypertension. This study will compare the advantages and disadvantages of azilsartan and classical ARB drug losartan potassium in terms of proteinuria, blood pressure control and renal function protection in patients with diabetes nephropathy and hypertension; We propose that the main indicator is the change of urinary albumin/creatinine ratio relative to the baseline, and the secondary indicator is the change of 24-hour urinary protein relative to the baseline; Change of blood pressure relative to baseline; Renal function, electrolyte and blood glucose.
To evaluate the efficacy and safety of CU01-1001 administered for 24 weeks in type 2 diabetic nephropathy patients with albuminuria.
This is a prospective, open-label trial to assess the efficacy of melanocortin receptor agonist bremelanotide (BMT) when administered with RAAS inhibition therapy after six months in subjects with Type II diabetic nephropathy. After six months of therapy, all subjects will remain in trial for further assessment and undergo a diagnostic renal biopsy to assess the effect of melanocortin therapy on diabetic histopathology at 12 months.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety of supplemental REACT injections in participants with chronic kidney disease (CKD) who have previously received REACT treatment.