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Tundra lists 2 Renal Fibrosis clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT06563765
FAP-targeting PET/CT for Noninvasive Monitoring of Renal Fibrosis
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is an irreversible change of kidney function and structure caused by many reasons. The main threat of CKD to human health is progressive renal function decline. Delaying the progression of chronic kidney disease to end-stage renal failure is an important clinical need, and renal fibrosis is a common pathway for the progression of chronic kidney disease to end-stage renal failure. The evaluation of renal fibrosis is of great value for the course and prognosis of patients with chronic kidney disease. However, pathological detection has the disadvantages of trauma, false negative, and cannot be implemented repeatedly. At present, there is a lack of effective non-invasive, dynamic, real-time monitoring and evaluation means. A commercially available FAP-targeted imaging agent, FAPI-04, has been used for PET/CT imaging of systemic fibrosis lesions with high uptake background in normal kidneys. Although it can show severe renal fibrosis, it is not conducive to the detection rate of patients with mild-moderate fibrosis who need more accurate evaluation. The new targeted FAP imaging agent successfully constructed by our research group has proved that it can show the degree of renal fibrosis at the living level and has correlation. Therefore, this study intends to carry out a series of clinical studies on the imaging of renal fibrosis with new targeted FAP probes, evaluate the specificity and sensitivity of the new targeted FAP probes in the diagnosis of renal fibrosis, and ultimately provide a new method for clinical dynamic, non-invasive assessment and monitoring of the degree and progression of renal fibrosis.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-01-29
1 state
NCT06210555
Multiparametric MRI in a Prospective Cohort of Living Kidney Donors, Recipients, and Healthy Controls: Correlations With Markers of Renal Function, Fibrosis and Ageing
Development of renal fibrosis is the irreversible culmination of various renal diseases and independently predicts adverse outcomes. Currently renal fibrosis can only be diagnosed by performing a renal biopsy. The procedure is invasive and is limited by sampling bias. In recent years there has been a significant development in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) based techniques. MRI can provide highly detailed anatomical images. Other MRI measures allow quantitative measurements of perfusion, oxygenation, tissue stiffness and diffusion of water molecules within tissue. The combination of several MRI techniques sensitive to different biophysical tissue properties in a single scan session is referred to as multiparametric MRI (mpMRI). Emerging evidence suggests that mpMRI could represent a method for indirect characterization of renal microstructure and extent of fibrosis. So far, studies performed in living kidney donors and recipients have been mostly cross-sectional. For mpMRI to transition to the clinical setting there is a need for validation of MRI-based measures with currently used reference methods for quantifying renal function and fibrosis. The aim of this longitudinal observational study in a cohort of living kidney donors, recipients and healthy controls is to investigate the utility of repeated mpMRI over a period of 2 years. MRI-based measures will be compared to current reference methods for quantifying renal function and fibrosis. The investigators hypothesize that there will be significant correlations between MRI-based measures, renal function determined by precise measurement of glomerular filtration rate and extent of fibrosis determined by renal biopsy. MRI-based measures are expected to be predictive of renal function decline and development of renal fibrosis. This study could provide valuable data that will be helpful in moving the field of renal mpMRI forward, with the goal of providing a novel and non-invasive method for the diagnosis of renal pathology.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 80 Years
Updated: 2025-07-28
2 states