Medico-economic Evaluation of a Telemedicine System for the Management of Chronic Renal Failure...
Chronic Kidney DiseasesThe main objective of this study is to demonstrate the efficiency ( cost-effectiveness ) of a telemedicine system : eNephro Application , compared with traditional care in the management of chronic renal failure in different populations : population 1 : Patients with CKD stage 3B- 4 , the combined endpoint achievement of target blood pressure and proteinuria . population 2 : Patients with ESRD treated by ambulatory dialysis , the cumulative duration of hospitalization in short-stay population 3 : Patients with ESRD treated with Renal Transplantation , the cumulative duration of unplanned short stay Two statistical analysis will be done : a main analysis for the one year initial follow-up for each patient a secondary analysis for the one year initial follow-up estended by one year (proposed to each patient at the end of the initial follow-up), that is a 2 years period. The intervention tested in this study is a telemedicine system which is a collaborative and expert system, consisting of: A dynamic shared medical record for the collection of administrative , medical, biological and clinical data for each patient. All health professionals can access the folder and fill in the support. It is the same for patients treated at home. A secure messaging for communication between health professionals and between patients and health professionals Expert systems analyzing data from each patient A management tool of therapeutic education Each patient and whatever the group will perform as part of its monitoring of the CKD assessments at baseline , 6 months, 12 months, 18 months (Populations 1 and 2) and end of study (24 months). These evaluations are about compliance, quality of life, anxiety - depression state. To enhance costs the point of view retained will be health insurance's point of view. Among the various costs, only direct costs are considered: disease management, hospitalizations, consultations in hospitals and private practice, prescribed medical transportation , home visits by health professionals, additional assessments related to the evaluated intervention. A probabilistic matching with the data bases of the National Information System of the Social Insurance will be performed. In addition, the acceptability of the system of telemedicine by patients in the intervention and health professionals will be also evaluated.
PERCI- Medium Cut Off (MCO)
Chronic Kidney FailureChronic InflammationThe medium cut-off dialysis membrane has been developed to provide a significantly extended molecular cut-off compared to conventional high-flux membranes. The medium cut-off membrane allows for a high permeability of molecules up to a molecular weight of 45 kDa and has a still limited permeability for albumin (68 kDa). The main goal of this project is the evaluation of the new, highly porous and selective dialysis membrane (MCO-Ci 400) for the treatment of patients with end-stage renal disease in hemodialysis mode and to study its potential to improve chronic inflammation.
TARGTEPO Treatment for Anemia in Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) Patients and End-Stage Renal Disease...
Chronic Kidney DiseaseEnd Stage Renal DiseaseThe objectives of this study are to assess safety and to evaluate the biologic activity of TARGTEPO treatment.
Mesenchymal Stem Cells Transplantation in Patients With Chronic Renal Failure Due to Polycystic...
Chronic Renal FailurePolycystic Kidney DiseaseThis study was designed to provide confirmation of safety of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) therapy in chronic renal failure due to autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD).
Renal Allograft Tolerance Through Mixed Chimerism (Belatacept)
Kidney FailureChronic1 moreThis study will examine the safety and effectiveness of a combination kidney and bone marrow transplant from a haplo-identical related donor. An investigational medication and other treatments will be given prior to and after the transplant to help protect the transplanted kidney from being attacked by the body's immune system
Nutrition, Inflammation and Insulin Resistance in End Stage Renal Disease-Aim 2
ESRDBy 2030 an estimated 2 million people in the US will need dialysis or transplantation for advanced kidney failure. An even more disturbing statistic is that mortality in End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) is six times higher than in the general Medicare population with adjustment for age, gender and ethnicity. Protein energy wasting is highly prevalent in these patients and is one of the most important determinants of their poor clinical outcome. Despite its well-recognized occurrence, the etiology and the mechanisms leading to protein energy wasting observed in chronic hemodialysis patients cannot be attributed to any single factor. However, irrespective of the specific etiologic mechanisms, it appears that the common pathway for all the metabolic derangements is related to exaggerated protein degradation relative to protein synthesis (47). Two well-recognized and presumably interrelated metabolic abnormalities, insulin resistance and chronic inflammation, may be the major determinants of protein catabolism in coronary heart disease (CHD) patients. There are no studies examining the effects of anti-inflammatory interventions and/or insulin sensitizers on protein homeostasis in CHD. Due to their established anti-inflammatory and other pleiotropic effects, Interleukin-1 receptor antagonist Anakinra and insulin sensitizer peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPAR) agonist Actos represent two such promising interventions. By modulating inflammatory response and insulin signaling through two pharmacological interventions, the investigators will have the unique opportunity to clarify mechanisms contributing of these two particular metabolic derangements in the development of protein energy wasting observed in chronic hemodialysis patients. The overall goal is to elucidate the mechanisms by which chronic inflammation and insulin resistance influence the development of protein energy wasting in hemodialysis patients. Specific Aim: To test the hypothesis that inhibiting inflammatory response by administration of an Interleukin1receptor antagonist (Anakinra) or increasing insulin sensitivity by administration of a PPAR agonist (Actos) will improve net protein metabolism. Hypothesis: The chronic inflammatory component of protein energy wasting (PEW) observed in hemodialysis patients is, at least in part, mediated by insulin resistance. Interim analysis may be performed (no specific plan at this time).
A Trial of Sertraline vs. CBT for End-stage Renal Disease Patients With Depression {ASCEND}
DepressionEnd Stage Renal DiseasePatients whose kidneys fail generally require dialysis treatments to sustain life. The ability of patients to make major adjustments in their lives for dialysis is hampered by depression that affects almost one-quarter of such individuals. There are no studies that have adequately tested whether treatment of depression is effective in dialysis patients and if there is any difference between the response to the two most commonly available forms of treatment, psychotherapy and anti-depressant drug therapy. To fill this important gap in the investigators knowledge, the investigators propose to undertake (1) a randomized controlled clinical trial of 200 patients to test whether an engagement interview will result in a higher proportion of dialysis patients accepting treatment for depression; and (2) a randomized controlled clinical trial of 120 patients to determine whether there is any difference in the likelihood of improvement of depressive symptoms with psychotherapy or drug therapy among dialysis patients with depression. Patients in these studies will be enrolled from among individuals receiving care in 50 dialysis facilities in three metropolitan areas - Seattle, Dallas, and Albuquerque. The research proposal has been developed with the support of patients, caregivers, and stakeholders to ensure that the findings from the study are relevant to them and can be readily implemented in day-to-day clinical practice. Hence, the engagement interview and psychotherapy will be delivered in a dialysis facility to ease the burden on patients, and the dose of the study drug will be changed in partnership with the study participants. In addition to depressive symptoms, the effect of treatment on other meaningful outcomes such as fatigue and sleep will be determined. The two forms of treatment for depression being tested in this clinical trial are very different from each other and patients differ with regards to the treatment option preferable and/or available to them. Successful completion of the clinical trial will provide patients, caregivers, and other stakeholders with the information that they would need when faced with a diagnosis of depression in patients undergoing hemodialysis. This will allow patients to select evidence-based treatments to improve outcomes that are relevant to them.
Vitamin K Supplementation in Patients on Hemodialysis
End Stage Renal Failure on DialysisAtrial FibrillationThe purpose of this study is to determine whether vitamin K supplementation will improve anticoagulation control in patients on hemodialysis taking warfarin for atrial fibrillation. Patients who participate will receive vitamin K1 three times a week on dialysis days for a period of four months. INR levels collected during this period will be compared to the four month period prior to receiving the vitamin K1 to determine if vitamin K improves the standard deviation of INRs and time in therapeutic range.
The ONE Study ATDC Trial
Renal FailureEnd StageTo collect evidence of the safety of administering autologous tolerogenic dendritic cells (ATDC) preparations to living-donor renal transplant recipients in the context of an international European Union funded consortium aimed at evaluationg cellular immunotherapy in solid organ transplantation (The ONE Study). It is anticipated that immune regulation induced by ATDC therapy can evntually be used to reduce the need for conventional immunosuppression in transplant recipients.
PrEscription of Intra-Dialytic Exercise to Improve quAlity of Life in Patients With Chronic Kidney...
End-Stage Kidney DiseaseThe PEDAL study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of a 9-month intradialytic exercise training intervention designed to improve quality of life (QOL) and alleviate functional limitations in patients with stage 5 Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) who are on haemodialysis. Exercise rehabilitation will be compared against established treatment options available within UK NHS haemodialysis (HD) units. A qualitative substudy will also investigate the experience and acceptability of the intervention for both participants and members of the renal care team. In addition, we want to examine whether this type of additional exercise treatment is cost effective within the health service setting. PEDAL is designed as a multi centre randomised clinical trial (RCT) and will recruit 380 adult patients who have been on HD for at least 3 months, from 10 HD sites located in Scotland, England and Wales. The type of exercise programming will consist of cycling exercise performed during each dialysis session plus a muscle conditioning programme performed twice per week. All exercise sessions will be supervised by a physiotherapy assistant. The exercise prescription will be individualised for all patients on the basis of their fitness and clinical status. The main objective is to examine the impact of exercise rehabilitation on quality of life and well being of patients. We hypothesise that the exercise training delivered during haemodialysis treatment will significantly improve the functional limitations/abilities of the patients leading to the detection of clinically beneficial improvement in quality of life outcome, as measured by the KDQOL-36 physical composite score (PCS) at the primary end point.