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Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT05399745

BILACO Trial: Biliary Atresia - a Severe Complex Congenital Liver Disease

BILACO Trial: Biliary Atresia - a Severe Complex Congenital Liver Disease With High Mortality, Compromised Neurological Development, Severe Malnutrition and Unknown Etiology

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
100 (estimated)
Sponsor
Rigshospitalet, Denmark · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
0 Years – 18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Biliary atresia is the most severe form of cholestatic liver disease. The children have high morbidity and mortality and get devastating pruritus and fatigue, failure to thrive, progressive hepatic failure and impaired neurodevelopment. The etiology is mostly unknown. More than half need a new liver from a living or deceased donor during childhood. However, correct timing of the transplantation is extremely difficult because of lack of consensus based on clinical assessment tools. All though the incidence is low, the cost of this disease is tremendous from both a clinical and human perspective. So far, protocolized neurodevelopment tests, genetic profiling, precise malnutrition evaluation based on clinical appearance, biochemical markers and brain MRI-scans, body composition, immunological function, level of physical activity and optimal time of transplantation in cholestatic children are unknown. The aim is to determine risk factors for neurocognitive impairment in children suffering from severe cholestasis in order to determine optimal time for liver transplantation from a brain perspective. In a prospective study, the investigators will investigate risk factors related to brain-, heart-, gut- and immunological function in the Danish cohort. This cohort consists of 75 children aged 0-18 years. In addition, 30 aged and gender matched healthy and 20 tetra fallot children will serve as control groups. The children will undergo extensive and advanced liver function evaluation, genetic profiling, nutrition and immunological status, neuro-imaging and neurocognitive evaluation at time of diagnose, 2 years of age, pre-school, pre-teenage, and teenage. In case of a liver transplantation, additional neuro-cognitive tests will be performed

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERNeurocognitive monitoringNeurocognitive tests and MRI of the brain

Timeline

Start date
2020-03-01
Primary completion
2039-12-31
Completion
2040-12-31
First posted
2022-06-01
Last updated
2022-06-01

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Denmark

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05399745. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.