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CompletedNCT00955500

Effects of Proteins in Patients With Cirrhosis and Prior Hepatic Encephalopathy

Effect of the Proteins of the Diet in Patients With Cirrhosis and a Prior Episode of Hepatic Encephalopathy. A Randomized Study

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
116 (actual)
Sponsor
Hospital Universitari Vall d'Hebron Research Institute · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 85 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to compare a normal-protein diet containing branched-chain amino acids to a low-protein diet in patients with non-terminal cirrhosis (MELD \< 25) who have developed an episode of hepatic encephalopathy within two months prior to inclusion.

Detailed description

Hepatic encephalopathy is a major complication of cirrhosis associated with poor prognosis and poor quality of life. Appearance of HE occurs in the setting of precipitating factors that increase plasma ammonia. The gastrointestinal tract is the primary source of ammonia, which is produced by enterocytes from glutamine and by colonic bacterial catabolism of nitrogenous sources, such as ingested proteins. This is the rationale for proposing low-protein diet as strategy to reduce ammonia production and as standard diet in patients with cirrhosis and hepatic encephalopathy. However, low-protein diet could cause wasting muscle and predispose to recurrence of hepatic encephalopathy, since muscle is an important site for extrahepatic ammonia removal. Branched-chain amino acids have shown beneficial effects on mental state of patients with chronic hepatic encephalopathy. The possible mechanism of action may be improvement of nutritional status through induction of protein synthesis. However, role of branched-chain amino acids in treatment and prevention of acute hepatic encephalopathy is not established. Administration of a normal-protein diet containing oral branched-chain amino acids may reduce recurrence of hepatic encephalopathy as compared to a low-protein diet.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTBranched-chain amino acids30 grams of oral branched-chain amino acids (leucine: 13.5 grams, isoleucine: 9 grams, valine: 7.5 grams) daily
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTMaltodextrin30 grams of oral maltodextrin daily

Timeline

Start date
2003-01-01
Primary completion
2008-01-01
Completion
2009-01-01
First posted
2009-08-10
Last updated
2009-08-10

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: Spain

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00955500. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Effects of Proteins in Patients With Cirrhosis and Prior Hepatic Encephalopathy (NCT00955500) · Clinical Trials Directory