Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

Back to Studies
NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07062289
NA

Endoscopic Ultrasound-guided Measurement of Portal Vein Pressure Gradient

Sponsor: Zhejiang University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This study aims to evaluate the accuracy and safety of a novel endoscopic ultrasound-guided portal pressure gradient (EUS-PPG) measurement technique in 42 adults with liver cirrhosis and portal vein thrombosis (blood clots in the liver's main vein), a condition where current standard testing (HVPG) fails to provide reliable pressure readings. Participants will undergo both EUS-PPG (using a specialized needle under ultrasound guidance) and HVPG procedures to compare results; EUS-PPG will be performed under general anesthesia in a left-side lying position-an innovative approach-while also enabling immediate endoscopic treatment of bleeding veins if detected during the same session. The primary goals are to validate EUS-PPG's safety in this high-risk group, establish its correlation with HVPG, and pioneer an integrated diagnosis-treatment protocol to reduce hospital stays and costs. The study runs from July 2025 to June 2027 at Zhejiang University School of Medicine.

Official title: Study on the Measurement of Portal Vein Pressure Gradient Guided by Endoscopic Ultrasound Based on Portal Vein Thrombosis and Portal Hypertension

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

42

Start Date

2025-07-01

Completion Date

2027-06-30

Last Updated

2025-07-14

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

PROCEDURE

endoscopic ultrasound-guided portal pressure gradient

This study employs an integrated endoscopic ultrasound-guided portal pressure gradient (EUS-PPG+) protocol uniquely designed for cirrhotic patients with portal vein thrombosis (PVT). Under general anesthesia in the left lateral decubitus position (novel positioning), a linear echoendoscope directs 22G needle puncture of the portal vein and inferior vena cava for direct pressure measurement, with real-time Doppler confirmation to avoid thrombosed vessels. Crucially, this intervention synchronizes diagnostic and therapeutic actions: if high-risk esophageal/gastric varices are identified during EUS, immediate endoscopic therapy (e.g., glue injection) is delivered in the same session. All participants additionally undergo standard hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) measurement via transjugular access within 24 hours, enabling within-patient correlation analysis.