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AKI in Cirrhosis

Tundra lists 1 AKI in Cirrhosis clinical trial. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07452484

SII in AKI With Cirrhosis

Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) is a common and serious complication in patients withAcute Kidney Injury (AKI) is a common and serious complication in patients with liver cirrhosis, affecting up to 20-50% of hospitalized cirrhotics and contributing significantly to morbidity and mortality. The pathophysiology is complex and includes Prerenal AKI due to hypovolemia, Hepatorenal Syndrome-AKI (HRS-AKI) resulting from systemic and renal vasoconstriction, and Acute Tubular Necrosis (ATN) from ischemic or nephrotoxic insults . Accurate differentiation between these etiologies is critical, as each requires a distinct management strategy-volume expansion for prerenal AKI, vasoconstrictors for HRS-AKI, and supportive care or renal replacement therapy for ATN . Early recognition of AKI subtype is therefore essential to improve patient outcoment out Serum creatinine (sCr) is the conventional biomarker for AKI diagnosis and staging. However, in cirrhotic patients, sCr is often unreliable due to reduced hepatic creatinine production, decreased skeletal muscle mass (sarcopenia), and fluid overload While previous studies have reported SII at single time points, serial SII measurements provide dynamic insight into the evolution of systemic inflammation and kidney injury. In cirrhotic patients, fluctuations in SII over the first 24-72 hours may detect AKI earlier than sCr, differentiate between etiologies (Prerenal, HRS-AKI, ATN), and predict in-hospital mortality . This approach is particularly valuable in cirrhosis, where traditional markers are unreliable, and could inform timely interventions and risk stratification, representing a novel application of a readily available laboratory index in a high-risk population.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 90 Years

Updated: 2026-03-05

AKI in Cirrhosis