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Bumetanide vs. Furosemide in Cirrhosis
Sponsor: Stacy Johnson
Summary
Patients with cirrhosis are frequently hospitalized due to an acute decompensation of their liver disease including bleeding, jaundice, encephalopathy, and volume overload. Volume overload is associated with increased mortality from acute hypoxic respiratory failure, hemorrhage from esophageal varices, and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Clinical practice guidelines describe sodium restriction and diuretics as first-line treatment, combined with regular body weight monitoring to assess response. In patients with suboptimal response to furosemide, alternative loop diuretics like torsemide or bumetanide may improve natriuresis. Bumetanide has a theoretic advantage over furosemide due to its more rapid and complete intestinal absorption, combined with a prolonged half-life in patients with hepatic dysfunction. In this pragmatic study, the aim is to compare the efficacy of diuresis with bumetanide versus furosemide among hospitalized patients with cirrhosis.
Official title: Bumetanide vs. Furosemide for Adults Hospitalized With Cirrhosis: the BUFF Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
500
Start Date
2026-03-01
Completion Date
2029-03-31
Last Updated
2025-10-30
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Bumetanide
Standard of care treatment with bumetanide (intravenous or oral administration) per treating clinician's orders
Furosemide
Standard of care treatment with furosemide (intravenous or oral administration) per treating clinician's orders
Locations (1)
University of Utah Hospital
Salt Lake City, Utah, United States