
Effects of Resistant Starch Diet on the Gut Microbiome in Chronic Kidney Disease
Chronic Kidney DiseasesThe investigators want to learn more about how to help people who have chronic kidney disease (CKD). This study will increase the investigators understanding of how diet affects factors that can slow the progression of kidney disease. The investigators are asking 30 adults and 30 children with stage 3 CKD to be part of this study. Participants will supplement their diet with resistant starch for two weeks. The investigators anticipate that the resistant starch will change the bacteria in the intestines to a more beneficial type of bacteria. The investigators will measure a product of these beneficial bacteria called butyrate. The investigators will also determine changes in the gut bacteria and products of the bacteria in the blood.

ENCOMPASS: Expansion Study B, RCT
HypertensionDiabetes Mellitus6 moreSome patients living with multiple long-term health conditions have difficulty accessing the services they need, despite available primary care and community resources. Patient navigation programs may help those with complex health conditions to improve their care and outcomes. Community health navigators (CHNs) are community members who help guide patients through the health care system. CHNs are not health professionals like a doctor or nurse, but they are specially trained to help patients get the most out of their health care and connect them to resources. The ENCOMPASS program of research evaluates a patient navigation program that connects patients living with long-term health conditions to CHNs. To understand if the CHN program can be scaled to a provincial level, the ENCOMPASS program of research is expanding to select primary care settings across Alberta. This study implements and evaluates the CHN program at Calgary West Central Primary Care Network in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

ENCOMPASS: Expansion Study C
HypertensionDiabetes Mellitus6 moreSome patients living with multiple long-term health conditions have difficulty accessing the services they need, despite available primary care and community resources. Patient navigation programs may help those with complex health conditions to improve their care and outcomes. Community health navigators (CHNs) are community members who help guide patients through the health care system. CHNs are not health professionals like a doctor or nurse, but they are specially trained to help patients get the most out of their health care and connect them to resources. The ENCOMPASS program of research evaluates a patient navigation program that connects patients living with long-term health conditions to CHNs. To understand if the CHN program can be scaled to a provincial level, the ENCOMPASS program of research is expanding to select primary care settings across Alberta. This study implements and evaluates the CHN program at WestView Primary Care Network in the Greater Edmonton area, Alberta, Canada.

Clinical Pharmacist Intervention on Medication Adherence and Clinical Outcomes in Chronic Kidney...
Chronic Kidney DiseaseThe purpose of this research study is to evaluate the impact of clinical pharmacist interventions on treatment outcomes, health-related quality of life (HRQoL),and medication adherence among chronic kidney disease patients. Pharmacist's intervention aim to answer: How a clinical pharmacist intervention program impact medication adherence in chronic kidney disease? To assess how patients' counseling and medication adherence impact patient health-related quality of life? How a clinical pharmacist intervention program improves clinical outcomes of chronic kidney disease patients?

Renal Hemodynamics, Energetics and Insulin Resistance: A Follow-up Study
Type 2 DiabetesDiabetes Type 25 moreThe current protocol plans to enroll participants with youth-onset Type 2 Diabetes (T2D) as well as obese and lean controls from the Renal-HEIR - Renal Hemodynamics, Energetics and Insulin Resistance in Youth Onset Type 2 Diabetes Study (n=100) [COMIRB #16-1752] in a prospective investigation that seeks to 1) define the changes in kidney function by gold standard techniques and energetics by functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) in adolescents with and without T2D as they transition to young adulthood; 2) quantify kidney oxidative metabolism by 11C-acetate Positron Emission Tomography (PET) in a subset of participants who are ≥18 years of age with youth-onset T2D and/or obesity; 3) determine peripheral arterial stiffness by SphygmoCor. Mechanistic insight will be provided by transcriptomic analyses of repeat biopsies 3-years after their initial biopsy for eligible participants with youth-onset T2D, as well as molecular analysis of tissue obtained from J-wire endovascular biopsies. This study will also leverage this well-characterized cohort of youths to define youth-onset T2D-related changes in brain morphology and function by structural MRI and resting-state functional MRI and through the assessment of cognitive function (fluid and crystallized intelligence) using the NIH Toolbox Cognitive Battery (NIHTB-CB), as an exploratory objective. All enrollees in Renal-HEIR have consented to be contacted for future research opportunities.

Optimal Management of HIV Infected Adults at Risk for Kidney Complications in Nigeria
HIV/AIDSAlbuminuria2 moreIn this study, the Investigators plan to determine the optimal means to prevent or slow the progression of kidney disease among genetically at-risk northern Nigerian HIV-infected adults. Based on data from studies of diabetic kidney disease that used medications that block the renin angiotensin aldosterone system (RAAS), we plan to evaluate whether or not RAAS inhibition (using a widely available medication that blocks RAAS) in HIV-infected adults produces similarly promising results.

Research on Optimal Immunization Strategy of Hepatitis B Vaccine in Chronic Kidney Disease Population...
Hepatitis B VaccineAt present, chronic kidney disease population are vaccinated with hepatitis B vaccine according to the standard three-dose schedule immunization program, and the effect of preventing HBV infection is not ideal. This is a randomized, controlled trial. The study will evaluate the immunogenicity and persistence of 20 µg and 60 µg recombinant hepatitis B vaccine with three or four injections at months 0, 1, and 6 or 0, 1, 2, and 6 in chronic kidney disease population.

An MRI Ancillary Study of a Malaria Fever Investigation
Brain InjuriesMalaria4 moreThis study will seek consent from parents of children enrolled in the Malaria FEVER study to obtain neuroimaging and 12-month neuropsychiatric outcomes data and kidney function on their child. The imaging and evaluations for this observational study will occur after the child has recovered from the acute malaria infection and has otherwise completed the RCT intervention and safety evaluations.

Preserving Kidney Function in Children With Chronic Kidney Disease
Chronic Kidney Disease Stage 2Chronic Kidney Disease Stage 31 morePediatric chronic kidney disease (CKD) results from health conditions that reduce kidney function for >3 months. It can progress to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD), which requires dialysis or kidney transplant. In adults, CKD is common and caused mainly by hypertension and diabetes. CKD in childhood is rare and caused primarily by congenital anomalies of the genitourinary system and immune-mediated disorders. The best estimate of pediatric CKD prevalence is <1/15,000 pediatric population. Hypertension occurs in 50% of affected children and is a major risk factor for decline in kidney function. Several clinical practice guidelines have offered recommendations for blood pressure (BP) management in pediatric CKD; however, clinical trial and large-scale observational data are limited, leading to a weak evidence base and substantial practice variation. The purpose of PRESERVE is to provide new knowledge to inform shared decision-making regarding BP management for pediatric CKD. We will leverage the PCORnet® infrastructure to conduct large-scale observational studies that will address BP management knowledge gaps for pediatric CKD and sub-groups for whom antihypertensive treatment and outcome associations may be different (e.g., cause of kidney disease and proteinuria). The project's specific aims are: Aim 1-Enhance the PCORnet Common Data Model (CDM) for pediatric and rare kidney disease research. We will expand and improve the PCORnet CDM with new pediatric- and kidney-specific variables, study-specific data quality optimization, and linkage with the CKiD cohort study and the US Renal Data System (USRDS). CKiD directly measures kidney function [ie, glomerular filtration rate (GFR)] and includes Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring (ABPM). The USRDS provides complete capture of renal replacement therapy ([RRT] dialysis and transplant), two components of the primary clinical outcome. Aim 2-Describe and examine the effectiveness of consistent BP and urine protein monitoring for preserving kidney function. We will describe the consistency of BP and urine protein monitoring and will contrast clinic BP assessments with ABPM. In longitudinal analyses, we will evaluate the effects of consistent monitoring of BP and urine protein on kidney function decline. Aim 3-Compare the effectiveness of BP medication strategies for preserving kidney function. We will compare the effects of (1) BP levels when treatment was started, (2) choice of first-line therapies, and (3) ongoing BP control on kidney function decline. We will also assess adverse events related to hypertension management. Aim 4-Assess patients' lived experiences related to BP management. We will field a survey that examines patient-centered outcomes by level of BP control and medication management approaches. This Aim will provide information on experiences with BP management from the perspectives of patients, parents, and clinicians that will complement the clinical outcomes studied in Aims 2 and 3.

Prevention In Community Clinics From Diabetic Kidney Disease
Diabetic NephropathiesThe overall objective of the proposed randomized trial is to test whether implementation of intensively integrated care of microvascular risk factors (glycated hemoglobin [HbA1C], urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio [ACR], blood pressure [BP], estimated glomerular filtration rate [eGFR], uric acid [UA] and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol [LDL]) will improve and reduce diabetic kidney disease events (DKD morbidity and mortality) among patients with diabetes and additional microvascular risk factors compared to usual care in public primary care setting (community health service center) in Xiamen, China.