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NCT07415421
This study aims to clarify whether surgical treatment of persistent hyperparathyroidism after kidney transplantation offers clinically meaningful benefits compared with a conservative treatment strategy. Kidney transplant recipients (\>6 mo after transplantation) with persistent hyperparathyroidism (elevated PTH and either hypercalcemia or hypophosphatemia) will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to either subtotal parathyroidectomy or conservative management according to standard clinical practice. The study is conducted as an open-label, randomized controlled pilot trial with a 12-month follow-up period. Outcomes include bone density, physical function, quality of life and symptom burden.
NCT06472973
Transplantation for end-stage-liver disease (ESLD) in the context of Alcohol-Associated Liver Disease (AALD) has been increasing and represents the main indication for Liver Transplantation (LT) in the world. Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) is considered a brain chronic disease and requires a transdisciplinary approach that includes medical treatment and behavioral interventions. In the context of LT, alcohol relapse occurs in 26 % up to 50% of LT recipients. Among Liver transplant recipients for AALD, severe alcoholic relapse (defined as more than 3 alcoholic drinks per day for women and 4/day for men) after LT leads to impaired longterm survival due to recurrent alcoholic cirrhosis (RAC), cardiovascular events and de novo cancer. Several strategies have been developed to prevent alcohol relapse. After LT, integrating an addiction team into the LT program has been advocated by the latest guidelines in Europe and the United States, in order to bring the management of alcohol-use disorder (AUD) in transplantation units, through the association of psychosocial and pharmacological interventions previously reported in AALD. However, those guidelines were based on descriptive studies, and the effect of this management needs to be confirmed through a randomized, controlled, multicenter study, involving centers that still do not include an addiction team in their LT programs. This study will therefore assess prospectively and comparatively the impact of an addiction intervention after LT on return to alcohol use rates. We hypothesize that standardized targeted addiction monitoring of Liver Transplant recipients decreases the rates of alcohol relapse two years post-liver transplantation.
NCT07524062
This study investigates whether infrared thermography, a harmless and non-invasive thermal camera technique, can help monitor how surgical wounds heal after skin surgery. The goal is to detect wound problems earlier, such as infection or delayed healing, and to support doctors in making timely clinical decisions.
NCT07653880
This randomized controlled, single-blind clinical trial investigates whether virtual reality (VR)-assisted, video game-based exercise training, added to a conventional pulmonary physiotherapy and rehabilitation program, improves functional level, respiratory parameters, and physical fitness in pediatric patients (5-18 years) following hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Participants attended 24 supervised, face-to-face exercise sessions over 8 weeks (3×/week) under physiotherapist supervision. The Experimental Group received game-based exercise using the Nintendo Wii Fit U platform with the Wii Balance Board and the Breathing Labs Breathing Games software (Slovenia) in addition to the conventional program. Outcomes included the Modified Alpha-Fit Pediatric Test Battery (vertical jump, 6-minute walk test, sit-and-reach, flamingo balance), upper-extremity isometric muscle strength (handheld dynamometry) and handgrip strength (Jamar), pulmonary function tests, maximal inspiratory and expiratory mouth pressures, accessory respiratory muscle architecture by myotonometry (MyotonPro: sternocleidomastoid, upper trapezius, pectoralis major), and ultrasound assessment of pleural thickness, diaphragm thickness, and diaphragm excursion.
NCT05501756
Alemtuzumab is an antibody that reduces the strength of the immune system that is given in preparation for allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT). In this research study the investigators want to find out if they can adjust the dose of alemtuzumab used as part of allogeneic HCT to target the level of Day 0 (the planned day of graft infusion) to an optimal therapeutic window of 0.15-0.9 ug/mL.
NCT07595952
Background: Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) are essential for evaluating intervention effects but are often challenged by regulatory and logistical burdens, high costs, and extended timelines. To address these challenges, the 'Adaptive Platform Trial in Kidney Disease' (APT-KIDNEY) will establish an investigator-initiated platform trial built on a unified regulatory, contractual, and operational framework. The platform emphasizes adaptive, cost-efficient methodology, automated data capture via linkage to electronic health records and administrative registers, and stakeholder engagement. Objectives: The primary objective of APT-KIDNEY is to establish an adaptive platform trial for evaluation of multiple interventions in patients with advanced kidney disease as defined by an estimated glomerular filtration rate \< 30 ml/min/1.73 m2 or end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) on dialysis or conservative care. Study design: APT-KIDNEY is a pragmatic, randomized, embedded, multifactorial, adaptive platform trial with interventions organized into domains, emphasizing low-intervention comparisons. Domains may be open-label or blinded and will be able to use response-adaptive randomization, adaptive stopping and arm-dropping, and adaptive enrichment to enhance efficiency and relevance where applicable. Study population: Adults (≥18 years) with advanced kidney disease defined by eGFR \< 30 mL/min/1.73 m2 for ≥3 months or ESKD on hemo- or peritoneal dialysis who are eligible for ≥1 one domain. Key exclusions include inability to provide informed consent; domain-specific exclusions may apply, but eligibility cannot be broadened beyond the core protocol. Trial outcomes: Core outcomes will be all-cause mortality, major adverse cardiovascular events (nonfatal myocardial infarction, nonfatal ischemic stroke, or cardiovascular death), and health-related quality of life (EQ-5D-5L). Abbreviated methods: APT-KIDNEY will permit domains to use frequentist and/or Bayesian methods. Primary analyses will target prespecified primary estimands and be conducted using the full analysis set. Prespecified sensitivity analyses will assess robustness to alternative strategies for intercurrent events and missing data, including per-protocol and as-treated supportive analyses. Outcomes are analyzed with generalized linear/mixed models and time-to-event methods with covariate adjustment. Frequentist analyses will be fixed-sample or group-sequential; results will be reported with 95% CIs and p-values, and Bayesian analyses will report posterior effects with 95% credible intervals and posterior probabilities. Bayesian domains will primarily use neutral, mildly skeptical priors. Multiplicity will be controlled at the domain level by a prespecified hierarchy: primary comparisons will precede secondary outcomes. Advanced adaptive domains will be evaluated by simulation to quantify operating characteristics including, power and Type I error, and the impact of outcome delays and missing data. Perspectives: APT-KIDNEY will establish an enduring, investigator-led platform for pragmatic, embedded nephrology trials, reducing start-up time and administrative burden through a shared regulatory and operational framework. Using standardized core outcomes and automated follow-up via electronic health records and national registers, it will generate faster, comparable, practice-relevant evidence across multiple interventions.
NCT07575412
This study was designed as a prospective, multicenter, open-label, randomized controlled trial. Eligible participants were patients aged 15-65 years with high risk or relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML), acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), or myelodysplastic neoplasms (MDS), diagnosed based on bone marrow morphology, immunophenotyping, genetic testing, and treatment response assessment. The experimental group received SHR2554 combined with azacitidine as an overlapped sequential combination with the mBuCy conditioning regimen, whereas the control group received the mBuCy conditioning regimen, both followed by allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT). The primary endpoint is 1-year event-free survival (EFS). Secondary endpoints include 2-year overall survival, 2-year cumulative incidence of relapse, transplant-related mortality, incidence of acute/chronic GVHD, and safety profiles.
NCT06348147
This Phase II hybrid decentralized trial will examine the effect of daratumumab-based quadruplet induction therapy administered at an attenuated schedule in subjects with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (NDMM) who are eligible for standard-of-care autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT). Daratumumab, lenalidomide, bortezomib, and dexamethasone (Dara-RVd) have recently become a standard induction regimen for patients with NDMM who are eligible for ASCT in the United States. As implemented in clinical trials, Dara-RVd involves twice weekly bortezomib administration, which is inconvenient for patients and may result in increased rates of limiting toxicity, such as peripheral neuropathy. Adoption of alternate schedules involving once-weekly bortezomib is common in real-world practice, however a paucity of prospective data supporting this practice exists. This study examines the efficacy of an attenuated Dara-RVd schedule involving once-weekly bortezomib dosing.
NCT07631689
Hepatic reperfusion during liver transplantation remains a critical phase associated with significant hemodynamic and systemic disturbances, despite advances in surgical and anesthetic management. This phase is characterized by the release of acidotic, hypothermic, and hyperkalemic blood containing metabolic byproducts and inflammatory mediators resulting from ischemia-reperfusion injury. Clinically, reperfusion is associated with hemodynamic instability, including reductions in cardiac output and arterial pressure, as well as cardiac dysfunction and arrhythmias, often requiring pharmacologic support. These alterations may affect not only immediate intraoperative stability but also short- and long-term outcomes for both the patient and the graft. The abrupt restoration of blood flow to the transplanted liver leads to the systemic release of accumulated metabolites, reactive oxygen species, and inflammatory mediators, contributing to a systemic inflammatory response that may impact distant organs, including the kidneys and heart. Several revascularization strategies have been investigated to mitigate reperfusion-related injury: initial reperfusion via the portal vein, initial reperfusion through the hepatic artery, and simultaneous reperfusion through the portal vein and hepatic artery. A less frequently used and insufficiently studied strategy, not routinely or systematically implemented, involves diverting the initial reperfusion blood from the graft to the surgical field, followed by the restoration of hepatic blood outflow to the systemic circulation. This study hypothesizes that discarding the initial reperfusion blood via the infrahepatic vena cava will attenuate early hemodynamic, metabolic, and inflammatory changes and reduce postoperative complications compared to conventional reperfusion techniques.
NCT07247877
The objective of this observational study is to compare the safety profile of auxiliary liver transplantation using small-for-size grafts with that of conventional liver transplantation and to evaluate the efficacy of this technique. The primary research question it seeks to investigate is: "What are the differences in safety and efficacy between auxiliary liver transplantation utilizing small-for-size grafts and conventional liver transplantation for the treatment of portal hypertension?"
NCT07582978
Liver transplantation (LT) is the standard treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and end-stage liver disease, with excellent long-term outcomes despite the increasing use of extended criteria donors due to organ shortage. As traditional evaluation criteria have become insufficient, new indicators such as Arterial and Biliary Complication-Free Survival (ABCFS) have been developed to better assess post-transplant outcomes. Primary objective: To assess, in a large-scale study, whether the procurement technique influences liver transplantation outcomes in terms of arterial and biliary complication-free survival.
NCT03000244
Background: People who have had an allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HCT) have bone marrow or an immune system that is damaged. They get stem cells from a donor who is a relative. Researchers want to study stem cell donors and recipients to learn about the long-term effects of HCT. They want to learn how the stem cells change and how to improve their ability to fight cancer. Objective: To provide long-term follow-up care for people who underwent or will undergo HCT. To collect data, blood, and tissue samples to learn about late complications after HCT. Eligibility: Adults age 18 and older who will undergo HCT or underwent HCT and are surviving one year or more from the date of HCT. The stem cell donors for these recipients are also needed. Design: Recipients will have 1 visit each year. They will have a physical exam. They will answer questions about their medical history and health. They will receive screening and surveillance testing. They will complete brief questionnaires. Recipients will have blood tests. They may have tissue biopsies or specimens (such as tissue in their cheek or skin or bone marrow biopsy). Recipients will give their current address and phone number, and the same data for one or two other people, who can get in contact with them. After the first visit at the clinic, some recipients may see a doctor close to home to get the necessary information and send it to NIH. Donors will come to the clinic for 1 visit. They will answer questions about their medical history. Blood samples will be taken.
NCT07193420
Phase III comparative, open-label, randomized (1:1) trial designed to evaluate the efficacy of reducing the total dose of PTCy to 70 mg/kg on GREFS compared to the standard dose of 100 mg/kg, in patients undergoing haploidentical HSCT for the treatment of a hematological malignancy, two years after HSCT.
NCT07569055
Invasive fungal disease (IFD) is one of the serious complications after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), characterized by high incidence and high mortality. According to the data from a multi-center study in China (CAESAR 2.0), even with the extensive use of antifungal active drugs for prevention, the cumulative incidence of IFD one year after HSCT still reached 6.3%, and the IFD-related mortality rate was 48.28%. In recent years, with the improvement of transplantation techniques, the application of new antifungal drugs and the optimization of diagnostic methods, the pathogen spectrum and clinical characteristics of IFD have undergone significant changes. Compared with ten years ago, the proportion of non-Aspergillus pathogens (such as Candida and Mucophora) has significantly increased, while the proportion of Aspergillus has relatively decreased. In addition, different types of invasive mycosis (such as invasive aspergillosis and invasive fusarium) show significant differences in clinical manifestations, onset time and prognosis. However, at present, large-scale prospective cohort studies on IFD after HSCT in China are still relatively scarce, and the diagnosis and treatment norms and prevention strategies in clinical practice still need to be further optimized. This study intends to conduct a multi-center retrospective and prospective combined longitudinal cohort study to comprehensively register the basic information, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of IFD patients after HSCT, providing evidence-based medical basis for establishing new clinical diagnosis and treatment technologies and improving the long-term survival rate of patients.
NCT06861257
One of the major challenges to improve the outcome of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is the reduction of toxicity and non-relapse mortality caused by the pre-transplant conditioning regimen, while maintaining efficacy. Treosulfan (TREO) (L-treitol-1,4-bis-methanesulfonate) is a busulfan analogue with a distinct site of alkylation that results in a more favourable toxicity profile in comparison with busulfan and total body irradiation. TREO is the prodrug of L-epoxybutane, a water-soluble bifunctional alkylating agent with remarkable myeloablative and immunosuppressive properties. The use of TREO, in combination with other chemotherapy agents, as part of the conditioning regimen for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) in children has progressively increased during the last decade for both malignant and non-malignant disorders. Data on TREO pharmacokinetics in the pediatric population are still scarce. To date, only a few studies, including small numbers of pediatric patients, have investigated the PK profile of TREO. These studies reported high variability of TREO pharmacokinetics, and the relationship between TREO exposure, toxicity and clinical outcome is still unresolved. Therefore, therapeutic drug monitoring with a personalized approach may be an important tool to optimize outcomes in the pediatric population. The aim of the investigators' study is to characterize TREO PK/PD profiles in children undergoing HSCT and to evaluate the relationship between TREO exposure and early toxicity and clinical outcome.
NCT05753930
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about the efficacy and safety of imlifidase in highly sensitized paediatric patients, 1-17 years old, with end stage renal disease (ESRD). The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does imlifidase treatment result in crossmatch conversion that enables transplantation? * How is the function of the transplanted kidney? The participants will be hospitalised in accordance with the normal routines for transplanted patients. The patients will receive medication to prevent rejection of the donor kidney, and because such treatment make the body more vulnerable medications to prevent infections.
NCT07547020
Hemodynamic instability is a common and serious condition in patients undergoing liver transplantation and is associated with increased morbidity and mortality if not promptly recognized and treated. It results from multiple interacting factors, including blood loss, changes in vascular tone, cardiac dysfunction, and complications related to the surgical procedure. Traditional monitoring strategies focus on global hemodynamic variables such as blood pressure and cardiac output. However, these parameters may not accurately reflect tissue perfusion or oxygen delivery at the microcirculatory level. As a result, patients may appear hemodynamically stable while still experiencing inadequate tissue oxygenation. This study aims to evaluate hemodynamic instability using an integrative physiological approach based on the interaction between different components of the cardiovascular system. Specifically, the study will assess four key interfaces: the relationship between the heart and the arterial system, the coherence between macrocirculation and microcirculation, the interaction between venous return and the right atrium, and the coupling between the right ventricle and the pulmonary circulation. The main objective is to identify distinct hemodynamic profiles in patients during the immediate postoperative period following liver transplantation. In addition, the study will evaluate the incidence of tissue hypoxia within the first 24 hours and its association with clinical outcomes, including 30-day evolution. This is a prospective observational study conducted in adult patients admitted to the intensive care unit after liver transplantation who develop hemodynamic instability requiring vasoactive support. During the first 24 hours, multimodal hemodynamic monitoring will be performed, including assessment of cardiac function, vascular tone, venous congestion, pulmonary circulation, and markers of tissue perfusion such as lactate levels and capillary refill time. By integrating these variables, patients will be classified into different hemodynamic profiles according to the predominant underlying mechanism. This approach aims to improve the understanding of cardiovascular dysfunction in this setting and to support more individualized and physiologically guided management strategies.
NCT05579639
Bloodstream infections (BSI) caused by bacteria translocating across injured oral mucosa are a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing stem cell transplantation (SCT). Unfortunately, there are currently no known strategies to prevent these BSI in this vulnerable population. The investigators will conduct a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial at three institutions to evaluate the effectiveness of twice daily intraoral xylitol-wipe application on reducing BSI in pediatric SCT patients.
NCT07542626
This is a pilot clinical trial to evaluate the feasibility and outcome of autologous transplantation of immature testicular tissue cryopreserved during childhood as a method of fertility preservation for prepubertal boys in case of gonadotoxic therapies. Freezing of immature testicular tissue is performed since the early 2000s and a number of our patients have now reached reproductive age. In case of childwish and azoospermia in adulthood, surgical sperm retrieval is planned and if unsucessful transplantation of the patient's own cryopreserved tissue will be performed during the same surgical intervention as a fertility restoration method.
NCT00582036
To determine whether intensive glucose control results in improved mortality and reduced hospital stay length by performing a randomized trial of intensive glucose management (blood glucose goal 110 mg/dl) using continuous IV insulin and glucose vs. non-intensive glucose management (goal 200 mg/dl)