View clinical trials related to End Stage Liver Disease.
Filter by:A Prospective, Single-Center trial, in Patients With Acute on Chronic Liver Failure. Study of Standard Medical Care Plus CytoSorb® Compared to Standard Medical Care Alone in a historical group.
Acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) is a syndrome associated with a high short- term mortality. Early identification of patients at high risk is important to determine emergency for transplantation and prioritize the need for intensive care unit. Unbalanced systemic inflammatory response is closely associated with mortality in ACLF patients. This systemic inflammatory response in ACLF increases liver and splenic stiffness stiffnes, which can be detected by transient elastography. Very few studies have been done in past evaluating liver and splenic stiffness as prognostic tool in patients of ACLF. These studies have taken only single value of liver and splenic stiffness as prognostic tool. No follow up study have yet been done assessing acute change in liver and splenic stiffness in ACLF. In this study, we hypothesize that acute change in liver and splenic stiffness at 7th & 14 th day predicts outcome in ACLF patients. With this study, we aim to evaluate whether acute changes in liver and splenic stiffness at 7th & 14th day predicts outcome at 3 months in patients of ACLF.
End-stage liver disease is synonymous with advanced liver disease, liver failure, and decompensated cirrhosis, and their disease progression is generally irreversible. Unlike other end-stage diseases, liver transplantation is a definitive and potentially curative treatment for ESLD. However, due to clinical and social factors such as the shortage of donor livers, the number of patients who can be transplanted is far less than the number of waiting patients. About 14% of patients die each year while waiting, and about 10% of patients are too sick to be transplanted. Although changes in organ allocation policies and popularization of living donor liver transplantation have significantly reduced the waiting time and mortality of infant recipients under 2 years old. Pre-transplant mortality in children older than 6 years remains high. Therefore, expanding the donor liver pool is an urgent need to treat patients with adolescent end-stage liver disease (AESLD). In 2015, Norwegian scholars proposed a new surgical method, that is, resection and partial liver segment (2-3 segment) transplantation combined with delayed total hepatectomy can greatly alleviate the shortage of liver donors in the above patients.Based on the experience of clinical operation, our center proposes and designs the clinical research of sequential adolescent left lateral lobe liver transplantation (SALT) for the treatment of AESLD. On the basis of RAPID, the safety and efficacy of sequential juvenile left lateral lobe liver transplantation were evaluated for the above patients.
ACLF is a syndrome characterized by rapid deterioration of liver function in chronic liver disease or undiagnosed chronic liver disease, with a high risk of short-term death. Both CMA and EASL mentioned that there is currently lack of specific drugs and treatment of liver failure. For patients with ACLF who are still graded as 2 or 3 after active medical treatment and/or artificial liver therapy, and the CLIF-C score is less than 64 points, it is recommended to perform liver transplantation as soon as possible within 28 days. Early liver transplantation is crucial for improving the prognosis of ACLF, reducing the risk of postoperative infection, progression from early ACLF to late ACLF, and further improving the 1-year post-transplant survival. The current priority for liver allocation based on MELD-Na can't give priority to liver donor matching to ACLF 1-2. Therefore, expanding the donor liver pool is an urgent need for early treatment of patients with ACLF. France team reviewed the development of APOLT to RAPID technology in liver transplantation for liver cirrhosis. Among them, 9 cases underwent two-step hepatectomy (including 5 cases of orthotopic assisted liver transplantation and 4 cases of RAPID surgery), 8 patients survived until the end of follow-up. Based on the experience of clinical practice, our center proposes and designs a clinical study of sequential adult left lateral lobe liver transplantation (SALT) for the treatment of early ACLF (Grade 1 and 2). On the basis of APOLT and RAPID, the safety and efficacy of sequential adult left lateral lobe liver transplantation were evaluated for the above patients.
Acute on chronic liver failure (ACLF) is a syndrome characterized by acute decompensation of chronic liver disease associated with organ failures and high short- term mortality. Development of systemic inflammation and subsequent organ failures determines is associate with poor outcome and short-term mortality. Previous studies have shown that endothelial injury leading to increase in levels of and exhaustion of its cleaving protein a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with a thrombospondin type 1 motif, member 13 (ADAMTS 13) which promotes the platelet microthrombi formation and subsequent organ ischemia. We propose that the vWF : ADAMTS 13 ratio can be predict the organ failure development and subsequent mortality in ACLF patients, which is considered to be a inflammatory state.
The goal of this observational study is to learn about the changes in coagulation factor VIII and IX levels in patients undergoing liver transplantation to help guide future management of coagulation factor replacement in patients with hemophilia and liver disease. The question we aim to answer is: should the recommendations for factor replacement in patients with hereditary bleeding disorders be altered in the setting of end stage liver cirrhosis? Participants will be asked to provide two blood samples, one at the beginning of their liver transplant, and one after their liver transplant.
Acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) refers to the acute deterioration of liver function in patients with chronic liver disease. Neutrophils are a major component of the innate immune system, and previous studies have revealed enhanced production of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) in ACLF. However, there is still a lack of systematic research on the correlation between NETs and the prognosis of ACLF. We screened NETs related biomarkers through bioinformatics analysis, which play an important role in the diagnosis of ACLF. This study will explore whether these NETs related biomarkers also play an important role in the prognosis of ACLF and further investigate their role in the pathogenesis of ACLF.
Hepatic encephalopathy is a frequent complication of both acute liver failure (ALF) and acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) and could be responsible among other neurological complications of residual impairment after liver transplantation. Specific metabolomic studies have shed light into pathophysiology. Nevertheless, whether HE metabolomic fingerprints differ between HE in ALF and HE in ACLF and their evolution after liver transplantation (LT) is unknown. The aim of our study is to analyse the metabolomic fingerprint in plasma of 2 different groups of patients before and after LT: - hospitalized patients with ALF and HE - hospitalized patients with ACLF and HE We will analyse metabolomic results to explore if there is any difference in metabolomic fingerprints between these 2 groups and if LT modify the metabolomic fingerprint in plasma in these 2 groups and in the same way. We will collect blood samples in these 2 groups on the day of HE occurring and then on day 1, day 7 and day 30 (+/- 2 days) after LT. We aim to enroll 10 patients in ALF group and 20 patients in ACLF group. Inclusion criteria are defined as age > 18 years, patient presenting with ALF (Synthetic liver failure (INR > 1.5) with hepatic encephalopathy (grade 1-4 of West-Haven classification), without pre-existing hepatopathy, HE beginning within <26 weeks) or ACLF (≥ grade 1 from CANONIC criteria), and clinical HE (grade 1-4 of West-Haven classification) on the day of enrolment. Exclusion criteria are defined as age < 18 years, absence of HE, LT without pre-existing HE, patients who already undergone a LT, legally protected person. An EDTA blood sample will be collected, centrifuged and frozen on the day of enrolment, then on day 1, day 7 and day 30 (+/- 2 days) after LT. Metabolomic analyses will be performed by different techniques but especially with high resolution liquid phase mass spectrometry in collaboration with CEA. Statistical analyses will be both univariate (Mann-Whitney or Wilcoxon tests) and multivariate (with a classical and adapted method for metabolomic studies: Partial Least-Squares Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA)). We expect to identify different metabolomic fingerprints between HE in both ALF and ACLF patients as well as different kinetics for symptoms resolution after LT. The long-term objective is to target the specific metabolic pathways for each group in order to allow development of new targeted drugs against HE in these 2 different conditions.
Colon cancer and primary liver cancer are common malignant tumors with low survival rate worldwide, and unresectable primary liver cancer and colon cancer liver metastases have worse prognosis. End-stage liver disease is equated with advanced liver disease, liver failure and decompensated cirrhosis because they are generally irreversible. Liver transplantation is a treatment option for the above-mentioned patients and is expected to improve the prognosis of the patients, but the biggest problem faced by such patients is the shortage of donor livers. Recently, a new surgical modality, resection and partial liver segment 2-3 transplantation with delayed total hepatectomy (RAPID), can greatly alleviate these problems.Based on clinical surgical experience, our center proposes and designs a clinical study of adjuvant liver transplantation combined with two-stage hepatectomy in the treatment of patients with unresectable primary liver cancer, colorectal cancer liver metastases, or end-stage liver disease. By improvement of RAPID operation, the safety and efficacy of this treatment method in patients with those disease were evaluated.
This is a prospective single-center dose escalation study of the administration of the microencapsulated hepatocyte therapy in adult liver failure. The purpose of the study is to determine the maximum tolerated dose of microencapsulated hepatocytes in liver failure patients and its effectiveness in treating the disease.