View clinical trials related to Liver Failure.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to validate and develop a new diagnostic and prognostic approach for assessment of liver function in children and adolescents with acute liver failure and chronic liver insufficiency. A carefully selected panel of functional and genomic tests along with diagnostic imaging and analysis of the microbiota will be performed in children and adolescents with acute liver failure and chronic liver insufficiency at Rigshospitalet. The tests will be performed in a serial manner in order to detect changes in outcomes. The study is an unblinded descriptive study, and approximately 20 patients with acute liver failure and 100 patients with chronic liver disease will be included in the project. This study will be the first of it's kind worldwide. The investigators expect the study to improve future diagnostic and prognostic accuracy and help the clinicians in identifying those patients in which the liver will regenerate itself, from those patients in which a liver transplantation will be lifesaving. Furthermore this study aims to help the clinicians in defining the optimal time for pediatric liver transplant in a narrow window of opportunity.
This study is designed to evaluate the safety and pharmacokinetics of zanubrutinib in subjects with impaired liver function in comparison with healthy subjects
The concept of acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) was introduced by Jalan and Williams in 2002 to describe the acute deterioration in liver function over 2 to 4 weeks in a patient with well-compensated cirrhosis associated with a precipitating event (hepatotoxic: superimposed hepatitis viral infection, drug-induced liver injury, hepatotoxins, or excessive alcohol consumption; extra hepatic: variceal bleeding or sepsis), leading to severe deterioration in clinical status with jaundice and hepatic encephalopathy and/or HRS. Following this concept, several proposals for the diagnostic criteria of ACLF have been suggested.
All patients of Acute liver failure not meeting the KCH (King's College Hospital) criteria/or meeting KCH criteria not having option of liver transplant will be recruited for the trial. The first group will receive Standard medical care with Fecal Microbiota transplant on Day 1 for 3 consecutive days. FMT (Fecal Microbiota Transplant) will be delivered rectally which will be placed bedside. Suitable donor will be screened and the stool samples will be used as per criteria. Stool samples will be taken at the time at Day 0, 1(Post FMT), Day 4, 6, 14,21. Sepsis screen will be sent. Inflammatory markers will be sent on Day 0,1, 4,6, 14,21. The second group will receive standard medical therapy/and an placebo. Stool samples will be sent on Day 0,1, 4, 6 , 14,21. Inflammatory markers will be sent on the time on day 0,1 4,6 , 14,21.
All patients having received at least one infusion of the Investigational Medicinal Product (IMP) HepaStem HHALPC during a previous interventional clinical study conducted by Promethera Biosciences
This is a Phase 1 study evaluating the pharmacokinetics, tolerability and safety of a single dose of ipatasertib in participants with mild, moderate or severe hepatic impairment compared to healthy participants.
CPFA is currently used in the treatment of severe sepsis with the intention of removing the proinflammatory mediators from the systemic circulation. Some evidence exists about the bilirubin adsorbing ability of the neutral styrenic resin which is part of the extracorporeal circuit of CPFA. The aim of this study is to assess efficacy and safety of CPFA in extracorporeal detoxification of liver toxins in patients affected by acute or acute-on-chronic liver failure.
This is an open-label, single-dose, Phase 1 study to evaluate the pharmacokinetics (PK) of intravenous (IV) MK-3866 in participants with moderate and severe hepatic impairment (HI) compared to that of matched healthy participants. The primary purpose of this study is to understand the effect of HI on the plasma PK of MK-3866 in order to guide dosing recommendations for participants with HI. This study will also evaluate the safety and tolerability of MK-3866 in participants with moderate and severe HI.
Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of preoperative liver stiffness measurement(LSM) by FibroScan in predicting the progress of liver fibrosis and prognosis after transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE) in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Background: Progress of liver fibrosis and liver failure and related poor prognosis after TACE which are not completely predictable by current method including Child-Pugh Classification. LSM is used to calculate the degree of liver fibrosis and is affected by several liver injury, e.g. elevated Alanine aminotransferase(ALT), Aspartate transaminase(AST) and Bilirubin et al. The investigators assume that LSM could be use to predict progress of liver fibrosis and adverse effects after TACE in HCC. Methods: At least 200 patients will be recruited in this prospective observational study with preoperative LSM, demographic, laboratory, radiological and other treatment-related factors. Participants will be followed up till death or to the end of study no matter the liver failure occurs or not. Data will be analyzed to build a mathematical predicting model. Research hypothesis:TACE is related to progress of liver fibrosis and a mathematical model with LSM is able to predict the risk of liver failure and prognosis in HCC.
Ineffective hemostasis or a paradoxical prothrombotic state of Acute-on-chronic liver disease (ACLF) has been well established. Thrombelastography measures the dynamics of thrombin production and provides a global assessment of coagulation incorporating the cumulative effect of the interactions at various levels between plasma components and cellular component of coagulation. And through the platelet mapping, it can help provide a picture of patients' function of platelet. This study aims to explore the predictive role of platelet mapping in ACLF prognosis, organ failure developments and short term mortality.