View clinical trials related to Liver Transplantation.
Filter by:A multicenter randomized controlled trial to compare the efficacy of ex-vivo normothermic machine profusion with static cold storage in human liver transplantation.
Incidence and risk factors for renal, cardiovascular and pulmonary complications after liver transplantation are not well defined. Blood products requirement is an important aspect of orthotropic liver transplantation (OLTx) management and has a great impact on patient's outcome. Transfusions of blood products increase perioperative complications and reduce graft and patients survival. The primary endpoint of the study is to evaluate the incidence of renal complication during ICU stay after liver transplantation using RIFLE criteria; secondary endpoint is to evaluate the incidence of cardiovascular and pulmonary complications. In addition patients' survival and the relationship between blood components use with the development of post-operative complications are evaluated.
Antirejection medicines, also known as immunosuppressive drugs, are prescribed to organ transplant recipients to prevent their bodies from rejecting the new organ. Some organ transplant recipients can stop taking anti-rejection medicines without rejecting their transplanted organ (this is called 'tolerance'). The purpose of this study will collect samples and data from 'tolerant' liver or kidney transplant recipients in order to find out: The purpose of this study is to collect samples and data in order to find out: - How long liver or kidney transplant recipients can remain tolerant; - What happens in the tolerant recipient's body over time; and - If there are patterns in the body that are linked to tolerance.
This study is designed to determine if a rejected liver is viable using normothermic machine liver perfusion (NMLP). It aims to 1. establish the suitability of livers which have been declined by all UK liver transplant centres by monitoring their function on the NMLP machine; and, 2. transplant the liver if its function on the machine is satisfactory allowing it to be transplanted.
The purpose of this investigation is to study if very low dose IL-2, given to liver transplant patients by subcutaneous (under the skin) injections, over a 4 week period of time, will cause an increase in the number of Treg cells in the blood.
Most patients who get a liver transplant must take immunosuppressants for the rest of their lives. However, this has occurred at the expense of chronic CNI toxicity, e.g. chronic kidney disease (CKD), metabolic complications, infections and malignancy. Everolimus (EVL) is a drug that may stabilize or improve kidney function for patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) that has been caused by immunosuppressants. EVL is used for standard of care treatment to prevent transplant liver rejection in combination with other immunosuppressants, such as tacrolimus. The overall aim of this study is to examine a combination of two different immunosuppressants and EVL to determine if patients may have stabilized and/or improved kidney function without liver rejection. This study will look at how safe it is to slowly withdraw one anti-rejection medication while continuing to take the other medicine, and whether this can be done without liver rejection occurrence.
The objectives of the study are to determine the impact of interferon-free treatment for the hepatitis C virus (HCV) on peripheral blood immune cell phenotype and soluble immune-related proteins in blood, while controlling for genetic polymorphisms known to impact HCV-related immune responses, and to determine the impact of the therapy on the emergence of drug-resistant HCV. The study design is informed by the researchers recent investigations of patients receiving HCV treatment. About 4% of patients who had not undergone liver transplantation experienced hepatic decompensating or another serious event. There were several cases of bacterial infection and two cases with elevated markers of autoimmune processes. These events suggest that treatment altered immune responses. About 25% of patients who had undergone liver transplantation experienced hepatic decompensating or another serious adverse event. The long term goal is to understand the pathophysiology of these complications and determine whether HCV treatment can cause an immune reconstitution syndrome in susceptible patients, while improving antimicrobial defenses in others
This study will be to prospectively determine differences in Surgical Site Infection (SSI) if a prolonged course of post-operative antibiotics are used following liver transplantation.
The purpose of the study is to identify factors that may influence tacrolimus (TAC) pharmacokinetics, and the impact of gene polymorphism (ABCB1, CYP3A4, CYP3A5, POR) on pharmacokinetics of TAC in Taiwanese.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether MSCs are safe and effective in reducing the primary nonfunction (PNF), acute rejection and Ischemic-type Biliary Lesions (ITBLs) morbidity in ABO-incompatible Liver Transplantation.