Hemodialysis Without Anticoagulation in Intensive Care Unit
Kidney FailureCritically Ill1 moreThe purpose of this study is to determine the safety and operative efficacy of intermittent hemodialysis without anticoagulation with saline flushes or Nephral 400ST in patients at high risk of bleeding
The Safety and Efficacy of Micro-energy Ultrasound in the Treatment of Renal Insufficiency After...
Renal InsufficiencyRenal TransplantationThe safety and efficacy of micro-energy ultrasound in the treatment of renal insufficiency after renal transplantation.
Standard Therapy or Individualized Immunosuppression For Lowering Adverse Event Risk
InfectionTransplant;Failure,KidneyInfections are common and associated with poor outcomes as well as high financial costs after kidney transplantation. Identifying and implementing strategies to reduce infections after kidney transplantation is important for improving patient outcomes. This study seeks to determine the feasibility of body surface area-based dosing of mycophenolate compared to standard dosing of mycophenolate in a pilot randomized controlled trial.
An Open Label Phase IV Study to Evaluate Dapagliflozin Treatment in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Patients...
Diabetes MellitusType 21 moreOpen label, mechanistic, single-arm study to evaluate the natriuretic effect of 2 weeks dapagliflozin treatment in T2DM patients with impaired renal function. It will measure the average change in 24-hr sodium excretion from average Baseline to average values at Day 2 to 4 within the study group. The study will allow for an up to 6-week Screening and Run-in Period, a 2-week Treatment Period and a 5-day Follow-up Period. Patients will consume food from standardized food boxes starting on Day -6 (patients not on insulin) or Day -20 at the earliest (patients on insulin) of the study until Day 18 (inclusive). Eligible patients will receive dapagliflozin 10 mg tablets once daily for 14±1 days starting on Day 1. This will be followed by a Follow-up Period of 5 days.
Tolvaptan add-on Therapy to Overcome Loop Diuretic Resistance in Acute Heart Failure With Renal...
Acute Heart FailureRenal dysfunction, which comprises 10%-40% of acute heart failure patients (AHF), plays an important role in diuretic resistance mechanism. DR-AHF was designed to demonstrate the effectiveness of early tolvaptan (a vasopressin-2 receptor antagonist) add-on therapy in acute heart failure patients with renal dysfunction and clinical evidence of loop diuretic resistance.
CNI Transient Replacement by Belatacept From 3 to 12 Months Post Transplantation in Patients With...
Chronic Kidney FailureCalcineurin inhibitors (CNI) remain the standard treatment in renal transplantation to prevent rejection. Currently the main limitation of kidney transplantation is the occurrence of chronic graft dysfunction due to the CNI nephrotoxicity. Thus, strategies to minimize or stop CNI have been developed as belatacept, a fusion protein (CTLA4-Ig) blocking the ligand of the main CD28 costimulatory molecule. In the original phase III trial, used de novo in combination with MMF (without CNI) belatacept allowed to obtain a better renal function as soon as 1 year and a better graft and patient survival after 7 years. Despite these excellent results, belatacept has not become the gold standard due to a higher incidence of early rejection. In addition, belatacept is not covered by the french social security policy, because benefits are considered insufficient with respect to the cost. Patients with poor early graft function are a preferred indication of belatacept. It is then used instead of CNI at 3 months post-transplant allowing to improve kidney function without over-risk of rejection. Currently after conversion, belatacept is maintained indefinitely due to the supposed CNI chronic nephrotoxicity. However this one is more and more questionable. Thus, the investigators assume that in patients with poor function at 3 months posttransplantation the belatacept's benefit could be obtained by a transient replacement of CNI by belatacept from 3 to 12 months post-transplantation. It is the feasibility of this strategy and its medico-economic impact that the investigators wish to study.
A Phase 2 Clinical Study of Pegerythropoietin Injection (RD01) for the Treatment of Anemia in Chronic...
Patient of Anemia in Chronic Renal Failure With HemodialysisA multicenter randomized, single blind, active comparator controlled phase 2 study which is to evaluate the effectiveness, safety and the PK/PD characteristics of different doses, frequencies and routes of pegerythropoietin Injection (RD01) as maintenance therapy in the treatment of anemia in chronic renal failure patients with hemodialysis
Remote Ischemic Preconditioning in ACS Patients
Acute Coronary SyndromeRenal Insufficiency2 moreRemote ischemic preconditioning is a process of serial blood pressure cuff inflations and deflations that are performed prior to a procedure and have been shown in various other areas (coronary bypass surgery, vascular surgery, ST elevation myocardial infarctions) to decrease the rates of adverse events related to ischemic burden and renal injury. This procedure has not yet been studied in the population presenting with an acute coronary syndrome (ACS), even though ACS patients represent the majority of patients seen in the catheterization lab. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of this simple and safe procedure in this particular population.
Treatment of Chronic Renal Failure With Adipose Tissue-derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Mesenchymal Stem CellsChronic Kidney Diseases1 moreTo investigate the biological characteristics of adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells(AMSCs) and its treatment effects on chronic renal failure.
Does Incremental Initiation of Haemodialysis Preserve Native Kidney Function?
Kidney FailureDialysisPatients who start haemodialysis usually retain some natural kidney function for months or years after starting dialysis. Even a small amount of this natural kidney function can be helpful in reducing the need for dietary and fluid restriction. There is also good evidence that retaining a small amount of natural kidney function may provide a survival benefit for patients on dialysis. Most patients who commence haemodialysis start three times per week for 3.5-4 hours per session, irrespective of the amount of natural kidney function they may have. An alternative approach used in some kidney units is to take account of the natural kidney function in prescribing the amount of dialysis. This may allow patients to start treatment needing to spend less time on dialysis or even to start just twice weekly. The amount of dialysis can be adjusted over time as natural kidney function declines. This is called "incremental haemodialysis". Both of these approaches are considered to be standard care although it is not known which approach is more beneficial to patients. There are some suggestions that the frequency of dialysis may influence the rate of decline of natural kidney function but this need to be tested in a large randomised study. To inform the design of such a study, a smaller scale feasibility study is required. We intend to randomise fifty new starters on haemodialysis with adequate natural kidney function into two groups - a group who will have dialysis prescribed in the standard fashion - three times weekly for 3.5-4 hours per session or a group who will have an incremental start beginning with twice weekly treatment. We will investigate how many patients have sufficient natural kidney function to be eligible, whether patients are willing to participate and continue in the study, compare the rate of loss of kidney function between groups, and ascertain whether this individualised dialysis approach is less intrusive to patients. The results will be used to design a larger definitive study.