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Browse 1,498 clinical trials for liver disease. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT06315361
Non-alcoholic hepatic steatosis (NAFLD) is characterised by the excessive accumulation of triglycerides in the liver and is often associated, in the absence of significant alcohol consumption, with insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome with which it shares the most frequent clinical manifestations (hypertension, dyslipidaemia, visceral adiposity, glucose intolerance). Due to the pandemic spread of obesity and diabetes and by virtue of better control of viral hepatitis, NAFLD is the most common cause of liver damage in Western countries with a prevalence of around 20-30% of the general population. The clinical impact of NAFLD in diabetes is considerable and represents a real driver of the major clinical outcomes that impact on the health of the individual, consequently creating a real 'burden of disease' especially in those populations considered to be at higher risk of disease severity. Individuals with diabetes are, in fact, those at greatest risk of developing the clinical sequelae of NAFLD and often do not receive adequate hepatological support and a correct hepatic pathology. In fact, it has been documented in the literature that the presence of diabetes increases the severity of liver damage, bringing the risk of NASH up to 80% and increasing the risk of significant fibrosis to 30-40% of subjects with hepatic steatosis as well as representing an independent predictor for significant fibrosis. Lastly, the increased risk of hepatocarcinoma in subjects with diabetes and NAFLD should not be overlooked, as documented by our group and confirmed in a large Italian case series. In subjects with diabetes, moreover, the presence of NAFLD is not only associated with worse glycaemic control, but also with micro- and macro-vascular complications as well as nephrological and neuropathic complications and increased mortality. Therefore, the possibility of applying the non-invasive fibrosis scores currently available for NAFLD on a large scale, in a population at high risk of progressive liver disease, would make it possible to characterise (a) the true epidemiology of significant fibrosis (F3 or higher); (b) allow primary prevention actions to be carried out by optimising the use of resources or by identifying subjects at greater risk of damage progression; (c) understand, in cases with a long history of disease the true prevalence of clinical outcomes; (d) understand the epidemiology of comorbidities and polypharmacy as a function of significant fibrosis.
NCT03557086
The goal of this pilot randomized trial is to assess the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of an advanced care planning (ACP) video decision support tool for improving patients' knowledge regarding their goals of care options and end of life (EOL) decision-making in patients with end-stage liver disease (ESLD).
NCT04564391
High-protein diets have been recently demonstrated to effectively reduce insulin resistance, derangements of the lipid profile and liver fat content in subjects with moderately and severely impaired glucose metabolism and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (LeguAN, LEMBAS, DiNA-P, DiNA-D). The effects can be attributed to prolonged insulin secretion and improved second meal effect, higher energy expenditure by urea synthesis, suppression of glucagon or other mechanisms. Up to now, it is unclear, if proteins with slower or faster digestibility lead to differential results in these study designs. The proposed study will elucidate this question. The Investigators hypothesize, that slowly-digestible proteins induce a prolonged insulin plateau supporting the second-meal effect. The investigators also assume, that these dietary proteins lead to a markedly stronger short-term secretion of glucagon followed by desensitisation of this hormone release. Fast-digestible proteins, on the other hand, will presumably induce a smaller second-meal effect and do not inhibit a second rise of glucagon in a consecutive meal. The investigators intend to study the effects of a 3-weeks high-protein diet in 80 subjects with NAFLD and T2DM on liver fat content (MR spectroscopy) and glucose metabolism. The investigators expect different results for slow protein (casein) and fast protein (whey), thus comparing both protein species. The two major clinical visits before and after the intervention period will include MRI spectroscopy, fasting blood sampling for later analysis, full anthropometric assessment, a mixed meal tolerance test and a set of behavioral tests, investigating decision making processes. In order to characterize the postprandial profiles (e.g. insulin, glucagon, amino acids) of the varying protein sources, preliminary meal tests are performed in overweight subjects with and without T2DM.
NCT03176797
Early diagnosis and treatment of liver fibrosis can repress or delay the development of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The purpose of this pilot study is to evaluate non-invasive multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques in the detection and grading of liver fibrosis, so that patients can be treated in time. These techniques combined could reach high diagnostic performance for detection of liver fibrosis, and could decrease the number of liver biopsies.
NCT03836443
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is mainly considered a nutrition-related disease and life-style/diet interventions showed some promising results. But in spite of this, there are no available markers to efficiently guide interventions. the hypothesize put farth by the investigators is that NAFLD patients develop postprandial abnormalities of plasma lipids upon "western diet" challenge, more severe in steatohepatitis (NASH) than in pure steatosis (NAFL), promoting liver injury. Our study aims to evaluate the presence of toxic lipids (such as free-fatty acids, ceramides, diacylglycerols, sphingolipids) in postprandial state after ingestion of a "western diet" in NAFLD patients. Consecutive patients (group 1: NAFL patients; group 2: NASH patients) with biopsy-proven NAFLD (liver biopsy \< 6 months) will be recruited during a period of 12 month. Blood samples will be drawn at fasting, 2hours, 4hours, 6hours and 8hours after ingestion of a "western diet" meal. Plasma lipid profiles using lipidomics, circulating markers of liver injury and inflammation will be analyzed. the investigators will also assess the hepatotoxicity of plasma from NAFL or NASH patients in-vitro.
NCT04764305
Out objective is to identify the mechanisms that promote hepatic and myocardial fibrosis, and collateral vessel formation in patients with complex congenital heart disease and Fontan circulation.
NCT03811236
In the recent years, research on brown adipose tissue (BAT) revealed that larger amounts as well as higher activity thereof are associated with a favourable metabolic phenotype. Longitudinal studies which applied recurrent cooling sessions demonstrated a high plasticity of BAT which significantly increased in size and activity during these studies. These changes were accompanied by improvements in body fat mass as well as insulin sensitivity. Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is estimated to advance to the primary cause of liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma in the following years. Besides predisposing genetic and possibly nutritional factors, the insulin resistance syndrome and obesity are the main factors contributing to this excessive hepatic lipid accumulation. The aim of this study is to investigate whether BAT recruitment via cold-acclimation results in decreased hepatic lipid content in overweight/obese patients with NAFLD.
NCT06306781
This study protocol is designed to evaluate the clinical efficacy, safety, and tolerability of HCL001 cell injection in the treatment of decompensated cirrhosis. The aim is to provide stronger evidence for the clinical application of HCL001 cell injection in the treatment of decompensated cirrhosis, thereby attempting to improve patients' survival and quality of life to meet the clinical needs for treating decompensated liver cirrhosis.
NCT02963077
The primary objectives of the study are to evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of A4250 after single or multiple oral doses in healthy subjects. In addition, will evaluate A4250 in combination with cholestyramine.
NCT04627012
For the advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the targeted therapy and immunotherapy are recommended. This study focused on the management of Lenvatinib combined anti-PD1 antibody for the HCC. This study will create a database that will provide clinical parameters and outcomes of patients undergoing Lenvatinib and anti-PD1 antibody as part of their standard of care in hopes of answering key clinical questions.
NCT06024681
The goal of this pilot experimental medicine interventional study is to explore the degree of transferability of the gut microbiome and associated metabolomic changes in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and fibrosis who receive faecal microbiota transplant (FMT). The main questions is aims to answer is: * To what extent is the gut microbiome transferable from donor to recipient in patients with NAFLD with fibrosis who receive FMT? * What are the dynamics of how the gut microbiome changes over time in these patients? * To what degree does the recipient metabolome change in association with this? Participants will receive up to three capsulised FMT preparations prepared from a donor selected rationally based upon their metabolomic characteristics. They will be asked to attend for serial clinical assessments (including FibroScan and MRE/ MRI-PDFF), and will also be asked to provide serial blood, urine and stool samples for assessment of microbiome and metabolome profiling.
NCT06296095
The study is a single-center, single-arm, open-label, dose-escalation clinical study, to evaluate the tolerability, safety and preliminary efficacy of CUD005 injection in patients with cirrhosis
NCT03969186
This study is a randomized controlled trial comparing a simple telehealth intervention implemented after hospital discharge to standard of care, specifically looking at the number of hospital readmissions throughout the course of the study. All cirrhotic patients admitted to the Hepatology service at The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania will be approached and consenting patients will be randomized to one of the two arms as outlined below. Patients will be followed for 90 days with daily texts and weekly phone calls. The rates of 30 and 90 day readmission as well as the days to readmission will be compared between the two study groups.
NCT05471596
To prospectively collect and evaluate pre-operative, intra-operative, and post-operative variables for all patients undergoing surgical microwave ablation. All patients who have a surgical microwave ablation with the Neuwave system will be added to the database after their treatment and procedures have been completed.
NCT04237116
The aim of this study was to assess the therapeutic efficacy of secukinumab on the psoriatic skin and to explore the anti-inflammatory (reduction of hepatic inflammation and cell damage), anti-steatotic (reduction of hepatic triglyceride content) and anti-fibrotic (reduction of hepatic fibrosis) effects of secukinumab in patients with psoriasis and coexisting non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD).
NCT05699863
This study will investigate potential correlations and relationships between obesity and organ-specific complications, including non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), non-alcoholic fatty pancreas disease (NAFPD) and fatty kidney. Furthermore, it will investigate how and if a lifestyle-induced weight-loss intervention decreases liver fat and improve NAFLD. Furthermore, the study will investigate if extracellular vesicles (EVs) can be used as a biomarker for early detection of any of the above-mentioned by comparing obese individuals with NAFLD and metabolic syndrome with both normal weight controls and obese individuals without NAFLD and metabolic syndrome. Lastly, it will investigate if weight changes and the resulting improvement of NAFLD are accompanied by changes in liver-specific extracellular vesicle (EV) phenotypes.
NCT05885373
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is one of the most common chronic liver diseases worldwide. Available data indicates that probiotics may regulate the gut microbiota and improve liver function in females with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. In this study, we aim to investigate if the synbiotics (prebiotics and probiotics) are efficacious subjects in liver function improvement in female subjects with Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.
NCT06244550
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common liver disease globally, with an estimated prevalence of approximately 15 to 30%. The incidence of NAFLD is even higher, reaching up to 58%, in individuals who are overweight or obese. The pathogenesis of NAFLD is complex and not fully understood. The metabolism of carbohydrates contributes to the development of NAFLD, as it increases the enzymatic activity of lipid synthesis in the liver, depleting adenosine triphosphate (ATP) rapidly and causing stress on mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum. The multifunctional protein Glycine N-methyltransferase (GNMT) plays a regulatory role in liver carbohydrate metabolism, and its expression is downregulated in the liver tissues of NAFLD. While weight loss and lifestyle adjustments are helpful in controlling NAFLD, effective pharmacological or healthcare interventions for NAFLD patients are currently lacking. Insulin resistance is crucial in the pathogenesis of NAFLD, suggesting that drugs improving insulin sensitivity, such as metformin, might have therapeutic effects. However, recent large-scale clinical trial results have not supported this hypothesis. Investigators propose that the mitochondrial inhibitory effects of metformin may be related to this discrepancy, and the negative effects may be reversed through food containing substances promoting GNMT gene expression, such as Ganwei (as know as "HepatoKeeper"). Preliminary animal experiments also show that the combined use of metformin and GNMT enhancers effectively eliminates liver lipid droplet accumulation and improves liver inflammation in a NAFLD mouse model, surpassing the effects of either drug used alone. Based on these findings, our team designed the medication treatment group for this clinical trial, aiming to investigate whether the combination of Ganwei and metformin produces a synergistic effect in humans. Ganwei compound herbal extract capsules contain extracts from natural foods such as Schisandra chinensis, Paeonia lactiflora, and Punica granatum. Among them, Paeonia lactiflora is known to contain components that enhance GNMT expression. Animal and cell experiments have demonstrated its potential for repairing liver damage and inflammation. This trial aims to assess the impact of orally administering Ganwei compound herbal extract capsules on participants and evaluate its effects on fatty liver, liver fibrosis, and metabolic indicators.
NCT04111133
A total of 130 patients with liver cirrhosis who fulfill the criteria of the study, and who have been found to have left ventricular diastolic dysfunction on a screening 2D echocardiography, will then be randomized by Block randomization technique, to two arms in a ratio 1:1(Group A) will receive carvedilol+ Ivabradine targeted therapy for heart rate reduction while Group B will receive Carvedilol alone; and the dosage of drug in the treatment arm will be titrated every week to achieve target heart rate of 50-60/ minute. Patients in the treatment arms, who are unable to tolerate carvedilol due to hypotension episodes, will be offered ivabradine alone to allow achievement of targeted heart rate reduction. All patients will be evaluated at 0,6, and 12 months. The end points will be clinical events, cardiac function improvement, renal function, and mortality.
NCT05724485
The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to compare the efficacy and safety of branched-chain amino acids (BCAA) versus placebo for treating muscle cramps in cirrhotic patients. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Compared the effect of BCAA versus placebo on muscle cramp frequency in cirrhotic patients * Compared the effect of BCAA versus placebo on muscle cramp duration and severity in cirrhotic patients * Compared the effect of BCAA versus placebo on quality of life in cirrhotic patients with muscle cramps Participants with cirrhosis who have experienced muscle cramps at least once per week will be randomized to receive either a placebo or 12.45 grams of BCAA orally per day for 12 weeks.