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Active clinical trials for "Renal Insufficiency"

Results 1571-1580 of 1903

Impact of the Composition of Packed Red Blood Cell Supernatant on Renal Dysfunction and Posttransfusion...

Renal Failure

Safety during transfusions is a major issue in medical economics. Despite drastic quality control measures, transfusion is still a source of short, mid and long-term morbi-mortality. This can be explained to some extent by changes in the composition of the packed red blood cell (PRBC) supernatant during storage essentially with the appearance of immunologically active compounds possibly involved in organ dysfunction on the one hand and post-transfusion immunomodulation on the other hand. These phenomena impact upon outcomes for cardiac surgery patients. In terms of organ dysfunction, kidney failure due to acute tubular necrosis and pulmonary failure are the 2 main issues. Following cardiac surgery, 11% of patients will present with transient renal dysfunction characterised by a 25% increase in serum creatinine levels and 3.5% require dialysis. The intensity of acute renal failure (ARF) is correlated to resuscitation : a 20% increase in serum creatinine levels 2 to 3 days after surgery significantly raises morbidity rates and a 50% increase raises the mortality rate to 10%. The precise mechanisms governing post-transfusion immunomodulation have not yet to be defined. The appearance of soluble type I Human leukocytes Antigen (HLA) molecules (sHLA-I), the FAS ligand (FAS-L) or cluster designation 40 (CD40-L) in the supernatant of PRBCs along the storage of blood products may be involved in such phenomena. These molecules are capable of activating or triggering the death of innate or adaptive immunity cells, especially the Natural Killer (NK) cells. Consequently the investigators propose to focus specifically on the detailed composition of transfused PRBC supernatants in order to identify the candidate molecules responsible for organ dysfunction or post-transfusion immunoparalysis. The investigators will combine a clinical approach based on the transcriptional analysis of renal tubular cells in transfused patients and an ex-vivo approach investigating the effect of the supernatant on immune cells and the Natural Killer cells of healthy volunteers

Completed29 enrollment criteria

Kidney Transplant Outcome and Organ Acceptance Practice Pattern: A Nationwide Analyses in the US...

Kidney FailureTransplant;Failure,Kidney

Despite the considerable advances in short-term outcomes, kidney transplant recipients continue to suffer from late allograft failure, and little improvement has been made over the past 15 years. The worldwide scarcity of donated kidneys and the decline in the number of living donor transplants have prompted a variety of efforts to expand the organ supply, such as accepting organs from donors who were older or had comorbidities or other injuries. Two major initiatives from the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), the organization responsible for organ allocation in the US, failed to improve the kidney acceptance rate. First, UNOS introduced the Kidney Donor Risk Index (KDRI) for all kidney offers in 2012. The KDRI is a score that predicts survival of deceased donor kidneys based on 10 donor characteristics and was intended to simplify the process of judging organ quality for clinicians. Second, in 2014, UNOS changed the kidney allocation system so that lower-quality kidneys are offered over wider geographic areas. Despite the ongoing severe organ shortage and these allocation initiatives, the number of discarded kidneys rose from 2,127 (14.9%) in 2006 to 3,631 (20%) in 2016. In this context, the experience of transplant programs outside the US could offer novel approaches to making organ utilization more efficient through the examination of the disposition of organs that are usually discarded in the US. This project aims: To evaluate the potential benefit of transplanting kidneys that would have been discarded otherwise in the US Computer simulation models on real life data to estimate the number of kidney transplants that would have taken place using data from a nationwide cohort study in two countries (France, the US); To evaluate the potential gains in allograft survival years that would result in the US from a less restrictive kidney acceptance practice such as the one from France.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Project to Improve Communication About Serious Illness - Pilot Study

Malignant NeoplasmLeukemia13 more

This two-year pilot study will test whether a one-page "Jumpstart Form" will affect goals-of-care discussions in the hospital. This form will be provided to clinicians and will include patient-specific information about preferences for goals-of-care communication and for care, as well as tips to improve this communication. Jumpstart forms will also be provided to patients or, if they are unable to communicate, their surrogates/family members. The information on the form will be obtained from questionnaires. The form is tailored to help patients and surrogates talk with clinicians about goals of care. This study is based on a successful application of Jumpstart Form in the outpatient clinic setting.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Furosemide and Creatinine Tubular Stress Test in Order to Measure Proximal Tubule Residual Function...

Chronic Kidney Failure

This is a two phase study. The first part will take place at the National Institute of Cardiology in Mexico, the second phase will be made in collaboration with the University of California San Diego. This is a non blind experimental study, 60 patients with different stages of CKD from the outpatient unit of the institute will be included. Each patient will receive a furosemide stress test of 1 mg/kg in non diuretic users and 1.5 mg/kg in diuretic users, in addition to an oral load of 5 grams of creatinine, as well as Iohexol to measure GFR. After the intervention blood and urine samples will be drawn at 10 minutes, 30 minutes, and every hour until the completion of the observation at 6 hours. Blood and urine will be analized to measure creatinine (blood and urine), then samples will be processed for measurement of furosemide (mass spectometry), indoxyl sulphate, p-cresol, hippurate, and uromoduline. The aim of this stiudy is to asses the differences between GFR and proximal tubule function.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Severe Kidney Impairment on Cenerimod Pharmacokinetics

HealthyRenal Impairment

To investigate the PK of cenerimod in participants with severe renal impairment as compared to healthy control participants.

Completed34 enrollment criteria

A Study to Investigate the Pharmacokinetics of ACT-1014-6470 in Subjects With Severe Renal Impairment...

Healthy

An open-label, single-dose study to investigate the pharmacokinetics of ACT-1014-6470 in subjects with severe renal impairment compared to control subjects

Completed9 enrollment criteria

BOne Dysfunction in Donor NEphrectomieS

Renal FailureKidney Donors

Most dialysis patients die from vascular disease, which is statistically associated with changes related to chronic kidney disease associated mineral bone disorder (CKD-MBD)3-9. Understanding the mechanisms behind this high death rate is crucial to improving the length and quality of life for patients with all grades of kidney disease, including those on dialysis. This is a priority for patients and clinicians alike. Most humans with early CKD are asymptomatic and unaware that they have a problem with their kidneys. Therefore they are unlikely to consult a doctor and early CKD is often unrecognised. Patients who are aware of early CKD often have other co-morbidities including diabetes, hypertension and vascular disease which, in the setting of a clinical study, complicate the identification of changes solely resulting from CKD. However over the past decade living kidney donation has become increasingly common and is now the source of organs for more than 120 patients annually at Manchester's renal transplant centre. Prospective donors are carefully examined and known to have normal kidney function without other co-morbidities. They then undergo a planned unilateral nephrectomy and lose approximately 50% of their kidney mass, creating an immediate state of moderate CKD. Over subsequent months the remaining kidney will hypertrophy and partially correct this, although the mechanisms are unknown. In the immediate post-operative period donors are inpatients on the kidney transplant ward and have regular blood and urine tests meaning that careful study of metabolic processes during their recovery is relatively easy by analysis of serial plasma and urine samples. Sequential changes in the plasma and urine levels of different bone turnover markers and metabolites can be analysed and will provide valuable new information to increase our understanding of the initial stage of CKD-MBD development.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Pharmacokinetic (PK) Study in Japanese Non-epileptic Renal Impaired Patients

Healthy SubjectsRenal Impairments

This is a human pharmacology, single-dose study to investigate the pharmacokinetics of orally administered Levetiracetam (LEV) in Japanese subjects with normal renal function and in Japanese subjects with various degrees of impaired renal function.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

The Incretin Effect in Patients With Kidney Impairment

Renal InsufficiencyChronic

The current study explores the incretin effect; a central mechanism of sugar metabolism. People with type 2 diabetes have a markedly reduced incretin effect, while the incretin effect never has been studied in patients with severe chronic renal failure. Non-diabetic patients with severe kidney failure and patients with diabetes and normal kidney function share several pathophysiological traits, including decreased sensitivity to insulin, fasting hyperinsulinaemia and impaired beta cell function. The investigators expect the incretin effect to be affected in patients with chronic renal failure without diabetes, which in time can result in therapeutic changes in this group of patients.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Effect of Obesity on Long-term Clinical Outcomes After Kidney Donation

Renal DysfunctionHypertension

Several studies have shown that renal function in patients who have donated a kidney (but are otherwise healthy) remains stable and within normal limits. However, it is unclear how donor nephrectomy affects patient subsets with comorbidities, an issue that becomes relevant in the current environment where inclusion criteria are continuously becoming less stringent and more patients are being considered as potential donors. In the present study, the investigators plan to evaluate long-term renal function in obese patients who have donated a kidney as part of a living donor renal transplant procedure. The investigators have selected this group because it is at higher risk for developing obesity-related complications such as diabetes and hypertension that may impair renal function, it is rapidly becoming a major subgroup in the kidney donor population, and no studies have systematically followed obese patients after kidney donation. Establishment of an appropriate control group is of primary importance in studies examining long-term outcomes. The investigators will also evaluate a 2-kidney control group to allow us to compare the individual and interactive effects of obesity and kidney donation on long-term renal function. Study participants will complete a medical questionnaire, undergo blood pressure measurements, and provide blood and urine samples for analysis of various metabolic parameters. Some study participants will have ambulatory blood pressure monitoring performed which involves application of an automated blood pressure cuff for 24 hours. Some study participants will also undergo direct measurements of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) with iohexol. In the proposed research, the investigators hypothesize that obesity in kidney donors increases the likelihood of developing renal dysfunction and risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and may increase the likelihood even more than in healthy controls.

Completed2 enrollment criteria
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