Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Stratification of Liver Disease in the Community Using Fibrosis Biomarkers
NCT number | NCT02037867 |
Other study ID # | 13029 |
Secondary ID | 13/EM/0123 |
Status | Recruiting |
Phase | |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | May 2013 |
Est. completion date | May 2033 |
Verified date | February 2019 |
Source | University of Nottingham |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Observational [Patient Registry] |
Deaths due to advanced liver scarring (liver cirrhosis) continue to increase, and liver
disease is now the 3rd leading cause of premature death in the United Kingdom. The majority
of liver disease is lifestyle related (alcohol, obesity and associated type 2 diabetes,
injecting drug use) and therefore reversible if caught at a precirrhosis stage. However,
current liver function blood tests are poor inadequate, and subsequently a large burden of
liver disease is currently missed.
A variety of noninvasive liver biomarkers (blood and imaging tests) have been developed which
identify liver disease accurately at earlier stages of scarring. The identification of liver
disease in the community, where previous studies have discovered a large burden of previously
unidentified but significant liver disease, is therefore a feasible place to develop new
liver disease investigation pathways using these noninvasive markers.
In collaboration with the Department of Health, Nottingham University Hospitals have
commenced a pilot community liver disease pathway in two General Practices in Nottingham in
February 2012. Patients with liver risk factors (hazardous alcohol use, obesity or type 2
diabetes)are invited to take part in the pathway. Patients undergo a simple blood test
(AST:ALT ratio and BARD score), with a high test result requiring referral for a liver
stiffness scan (Fibroscan)which is performed in the community setting. High threshold scan
values are reviewed by a consultant liver specialist in a community liver clinic. Preliminary
findings show that the pathway accurately identifies patients with early liver scarring and
previously unidentified significant liver disease. The participating General Practitioners
have also noted a striking number of patients finally engaging in important lifestyle changes
following pathway implementation. A second phase of the pilot pathway, in 2 Inner City
General Practices with a total practice population of c.14,000 patients commenced in June
2013.
We have subsequently designed this cohort study, where pilot participants will be consented
for follow up over a long period. We will assess future liver-related and cardiovascular
events (including death), and perform qualitative patient interviews to assess the reasons
for and persistence of lifestyle changes after liver disease investigation. We hypothesize
that stratification of liver disease in the community will unearth a significant amount of
previously undetected but significant chronic liver disease. Moreover, we will evaluate
whether stratification of liver disease using these tests predicts future liver and
cardiovascular disease and death, and whether stratification has an impact on patient's
future lifestyle choices.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 2000 |
Est. completion date | May 2033 |
Est. primary completion date | May 2033 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Adult patients aged 18 years or over (male or female) with primary risk factor for liver disease: - Hazardous alcohol use (>14 units/week for women, >21 units/week for men) - Type 2 Diabetes - Obesity - Persistently elevated ALT with normal liver serology Exclusion Criteria: - Active malignancy at study enrolment - Inability to provide informed consent for study enrolment - Known presence of histologically proven liver disease prior to pilot pathway participation |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | NIHR Nottingham Digestive Diseases Biomedical Research Unit | Nottingham | Notts |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Nottingham |
United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Liver and cardiovascular-related mortality | Death recorded as resulting from cardiovascular or liver-related causes | 20 years | |
Secondary | Liver Cirrhosis | Incidence of compensated and decompensated cirrhosis diagnosis during the study period. | 20 years | |
Secondary | Cardiovascular Disease | Incidence of cardiovascular disease events(defined as symptomatic coronary or cerebrovascular disease)during the study period. | 20 years | |
Secondary | All-cause mortality | Recording of any death during the study period | 20 years |
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