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3 clinical studies listed.

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End-stage Liver Disease

Tundra lists 3 End-stage Liver Disease clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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ENROLLING BY INVITATION

NCT05001009

Goals of Care Conversations Study

The long term goal is to improve quality of care in Veterans with serious illnesses by aligning medical care with Veterans' goals and values. The objective of this study is to use a sequentially randomized trial to determine what implementation strategies are effective to increase early, outpatient goals of care conversations. The study will use interviews with and surveys of medical providers, patients, and caregivers, along with medical record data. This work is significant because it tests ways Veterans can express their goals and preferences for life sustaining treatments and have them honored.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2024-12-27

2 states

Seriously Ill Patients
Cancer
Heart Failure
+5
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT06615934

Effects of Aerobic and Resistance Exercises on Inpatients Liver Transplantation Recipients

The prevalence of chronic liver disease and primary liver cancer is still increasing on a global scale, and so are their associated deaths. Compared to other diseases, death from liver disease often means premature death, because two-thirds of the lives lost are working years. Liver transplantation (LT) is an important and life-saving treatment option for the treatment of congenital metabolic disorders, acute liver failure, end-stage chronic liver disease (ESLD) and primary liver cancers. Modern liver transplantation is characterized by significant improvements in post-transplant patient survival, graft survival, and quality of life. Impaired physical fitness of patients with end-stage liver disease often persists after liver transplantation and compromises post-transplant recovery. Prior to liver transplantation, excess ammonia taken up by skeletal muscle is a major metabolic driver of muscle wasting in end-stage liver disease and mainly inhibits the mTOR signaling pathway that supports muscle protein synthesis. Because excess ammonia is no longer present after transplantation, recovery of muscle mass and function can be expected in patients. However, immunosuppression with calcineurin inhibitors that inhibit the mTOR signaling pathway may improve lethal length. It is also thought that post-transplant treatment regimens contribute to delayed recovery of decreased bone mineral density and increased fracture risk. Greater muscle mass, as measured by creatinine clearance at 1 year after transplantation, was associated with longer recipient and allograft survival. The results of previous studies indicate low cardiovascular fitness in patients after liver transplantation. Since after liver transplantation, cardiovascular diseases cause 19 to 42% of deaths not related to the liver, performing aerobic exercises to obtain and maintain cardiovascular fitness after liver transplantation can reduce the mortality rate. After transplanting, reduced significantly. Considering the important role of the immune system in transplant rejection, the safety of sports training is very important in terms of not over-activating the immune system and endangering the life of the transplanted tissue. In previous studies related to exercise and immune system activity and inflammatory cytokines after transplantation, it has been shown that moderate exercise including aerobic and resistance exercises can inhibit inflammatory cytokines and have beneficial effects on the immune system. High levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) in the period after transplant surgery are associated with an increased risk of transplant rejection. Aerobic exercise reduces levels of inflammatory cytokine TNF-α and markers of liver function in patients with chronic liver diseases. According to this evidence, it seems that doing sports exercises is effective in reducing the risk of transplant rejection and modulating the patient's immune system. Acute graft rejection occurs days to weeks after transplantation. The immune system can see the transplanted organ as foreign and attack it, destroy it and lead to transplant rejection. Considering the mentioned benefits of exercise therapy after liver transplantation, it is possible that the early start of exercise therapy in the hospitalization phase leads to a reduction in the risk of transplant rejection and improvement of allograft residues in patients after liver transplantation. Considering that the current evidence shows that there is no use of a specific rehabilitation protocol in the hospitalization phase of patients after liver transplantation, we intend to evaluate its effects with changes in the common physiotherapy program in these departments according to the specific conditions of these patients. In other words, despite the acceptable therapeutic effects, the use of a combined protocol of aerobic and resistance exercises in the hospitalization phase of these patients has not been reported so far.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2024-09-27

Liver Transplant Disorder
Liver Transplant; Complications
End-stage Liver Disease
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT05750329

Liver Transplantation With Two-stage Liver Resection in Unresectable Liver Cancer , Metastases or Emd-stage Liver Disease (LTLR-LC)

Colon cancer and primary liver cancer are common malignant tumors with low survival rate worldwide, and unresectable primary liver cancer and colon cancer liver metastases have worse prognosis. End-stage liver disease is equated with advanced liver disease, liver failure and decompensated cirrhosis because they are generally irreversible. Liver transplantation is a treatment option for the above-mentioned patients and is expected to improve the prognosis of the patients, but the biggest problem faced by such patients is the shortage of donor livers. Recently, a new surgical modality, resection and partial liver segment 2-3 transplantation with delayed total hepatectomy (RAPID), can greatly alleviate these problems.Based on clinical surgical experience, our center proposes and designs a clinical study of adjuvant liver transplantation combined with two-stage hepatectomy in the treatment of patients with unresectable primary liver cancer, colorectal cancer liver metastases, or end-stage liver disease. By improvement of RAPID operation, the safety and efficacy of this treatment method in patients with those disease were evaluated.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 75 Years

Updated: 2023-08-07

Liver Transplant Disorder
Hepatic Cancer
End-stage Liver Disease