View clinical trials related to Hepatopulmonary Syndrome.
Filter by:- The study will be a prospective open labelled double blinded randomized controlled study. - The study will be conducted on patients admitted to Department of Hepatology from 2012 to 2014 at Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences, New Delhi - Patients diagnosed as having clinical or subclinical hepatopulmonary syndrome will be started on oral pentoxifylline therapy 400 mg thrice daily for 12 weeks. - Patients not responding to this therapy will be given divided into 2 arms with one arm receiving additional Tab Rifaximin 400 mg thrice daily or placebo for 12 weeks.
The most common observed cause of gas exchange abnormalities and hypoxemia in cirrhosis is the hepatopulmonary syndrome (HPS) with a reported prevalence of 20-47% in patients with hepatic impairment and cirrhosis. HPS is by far the most frequent respiratory complication of cirrhosis. It is a progressive disease leading to significantly increased mortality. Up to date, the only therapeutic option is liver transplantation. The study hypothesis is that administration of bosentan in patients with liver cirrhosis suffering from hepatopulmonary syndrome improves gas exchange. 18 patients with liver cirrhosis fulfilling criteria of HPS according to the ERS task force criteria will be included in this block randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled study (12 patients will be treated with bosentan, 6 with placebo). Patients will receive bosentan 62,5mg b.i.d. for 4 weeks and 125 mg b.i.d. for 8 weeks or placebo. The duration of the treatment phase of the study is 12 weeks. The primary endpoint is the alteration of gas exchange after 3 months of therapy. The expected duration of the study is 2 years.
The Hepatopulmonary syndrome (HPS) results from intrapulmonary microvascular dilatation that impairs arterial oxygenation in the setting of cirrhosis or portal hypertension. As many as 10-20% of cirrhotics being evaluated for orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) have advanced HPS and mortality is greater in those with HPS than in those without HPS. Currently, OLT is the only effective treatment, although post-operative mortality in HPS is increased relative to cirrhotic patients without HPS, with a one-year survival of between 68-80 %. Therefore, an effective medical therapy for advanced HPS could improve both pre-operative and post-operative mortality. Recent work in experimental models of HPS has revealed that both nitric oxide synthase-derived nitric oxide and heme oxygenase-derived carbon monoxide cause intrapulmonary vasodilatation. These alterations appear to be driven in part by TNF-α modulation of pulmonary blood flow and intravascular monocyte accumulation. Pentoxifylline is a nonspecific phosphodiesterase inhibitor with inhibitory effects on TNF-α and has recently been shown to be beneficial in patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis where TNF-α overproduction contributes to liver injury. In experimental HPS, pentoxifylline administration also decreases the severity of oxygenation abnormalities. However, pentoxifylline therapy has been associated with dose limiting side effects in patients with liver disease and the tolerability of pentoxifylline in cirrhotic patients with advanced HPS is unknown. Therefore, this open label single arm clinical trial was designed to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of 8 weeks of pentoxifylline in cirrhotic patients with advanced HPS being considered for OLT.
The hepatopulmonary syndrome (HPS)and pre-HPS is a disease seen in patients with chronic liver disease, whereby patients develop dilations in the blood vessels of the lungs, resulting in low oxygen levels and shortness of breath. In this study, each HPS and pre-HPS subject will be treated with a commonly used antibiotic called "norfloxacin" (approved for use in the treatment of gonorrhea, prostatitis and urinary tract infections) for a 4-week period. In order to ensure that any observed improvement was indeed due to norfloxacin, each subject will also be treated with a separate 4-week course of an identical placebo. There will also be a 4 week wash-out period (no study medication/placebo) between the 2 courses of treatment. The primary aim of the study will be to measure improvements in oxygen levels while on norfloxacin, although a number of secondary parameters will also be followed.