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Clinical Trial Summary

The aim of this study is to test a non-invasive imaging technique to reliably diagnose NAFLD in children and adolescents with obesity and assess the degree of fibrosis.


Clinical Trial Description

NAFLD (non-alcoholic fatty liver disease) is by far the most common form of chronic liver disease worldwide. It is estimated that it affects up to 1/3 of the adult population in industrialized countries and additionally more and more children are affected. The term NAFLD covers a broad spectrum of diseases ranging from simple hepatic steatosis (accumulation of fat in hepatocytes) to NASH (non-alcoholic steatohepatitis). The latter is a progression of liver steatosis with inflammation, fibrosis and chronic inflammatory structural changes. Up to 20% of a NASH develops liver cirrhosis, more rarely also a hepatocellular carcinoma. It is known that the degree of fibrosis is the most important parameter for the clinical course and prognosis. In addition, patients with mild lobular inflammation or fibrosis (regardless of severity) have an increased risk of developing NASH compared to patients with exclusive steatosis. A significant number of patients with NAFL may develop fibrotising NASH (5-20%). This is particularly the case when metabolic factors continue to deteriorate. Liver biopsy remains the gold standard for the diagnosis of NAFLD. In particular, differentiation between NAFL and NASH and the degree of fibrosis are still only possible using histology. The invasive nature of the procedure involves risks to the patient's health such as bleeding, injuries to other organs or nerves, and complications of anesthesia. Furthermore, since the biopsy is taken selectively as a liver biopsy, it is possible to test a sample that does not adequately represent the degree of actual fibrosis, since regional differences in the severity of liver fibrosis can often be present. In addition, the liver biopsy is associated with considerable costs. Accordingly, liver biopsy is not an optimal diagnostic procedure and is hardly suitable as a diagnostic method for short-term follow-up under therapy. For this reason, a reliable, non-invasive method has long been sought to diagnose NAFLD, to distinguish NASH from steatosis, to assess the degree of fibrosis and which allows a less stressful assessment of the course of the liver. Imaging procedures are available here. B-image sonography is already routinely used in children and adolescents with suspected or proven NASH for the detection of liver remodeling processes, in particular fibrosis. B-scan sonography is an excellent method for determining the presence and extent of hepatic steatosis, but the detection and graduation of liver fibrosis using B-mode sonography is only possible in very advanced stages. In recent years, the determination of tissue stiffness in various organ systems and their pathologies, such as the breast, tendons and liver, has been successfully used in adults. Individual reports in adults give first indications that liver remodelling processes, in particular fibrosis by means of shear wave elastography (SWE), can be diagnosed in early stages. However, the evidence of the use of SWE in children to assess liver parenchyma changes, especially in NAFLD, is still insufficient. Therefore, in this study it will be investigated whether the rt-SWE provides reproducible values for liver stiffness and fibrosis in children and adolescents and by that a reliably diagnosis of NAFLD and assessment of the degree of fibrosis is possible. The planned clinical examination and blood collection for laboratory chemical examinations are part of the routine follow-up of patients with obesity and steatosis hepatis. There will be no additional examinations, so there will be no greater burden on the young patients and no additional time expenditure. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03587298
Study type Observational
Source RWTH Aachen University
Contact Angeliki Pappas, Dr. med.
Phone 0241 80-89206
Email apappa@ukaachen.de
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date September 15, 2018
Completion date August 2021

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