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Not Yet RecruitingNCT06279845

A Clinical Cohort Study on the Pathogen Spectrum of Hepatic Virus-caused Cirrhosis Complicated With Infection

A Multicenter Prospective Clinical Cohort Study on the Pathogen Spectrum of Hepatic Virus-caused Cirrhosis Complicated With Infection

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
2,000 (estimated)
Sponsor
Zhejiang University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this observational study is to expound the population and characteristics of pathogenic microorganisms with co-infection, draw the pedigree of pathogenic microorganisms, and evaluate its influence on disease outcome in patients with hepatic virus-caused cirrhosis. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Describe the populations and characteristics of pathogenic microorganisms responsible for co-infections in patients with hepatic virus-caused cirrhosis. * Map the spectrum of pathogenic microorganisms, and evaluate their impact on disease regression.

Detailed description

Cirrhosis is a chronic progressive disease caused by different etiological factors and characterized by diffuse hepatocellular degeneration and necrosis, abnormal regeneration of hepatocytes, intrahepatic neovascularization, massive proliferation of hepatic fibrotic tissues, and pseudofollicular formation. The number of patients with liver disease in China is about 300 million, and the number of deaths from cirrhosis accounts for 11% of the global deaths from cirrhosis. Its etiology is diverse, and hepatitis due to hepatophilic virus infection is still the main cause in China. A recent study by scholars on 11861 patients hospitalized for the first time due to liver cirrhosis in 50 hospitals in China showed that among the causes of liver cirrhosis in China, HBV infection accounted for 71.15% and HCV infection accounted for 8.12%. About two-thirds of patients with cirrhosis and extrahepatic organ failure suffer from sepsis. Infections increase the risk of death in patients with cirrhosis, and reports have shown that these patients are hospitalized for twice as long as patients without cirrhotic sepsis and have a hospital mortality rate of up to 50%. This study focuses on the impact of secondary infections on the clinical prognosis of cirrhosis, and proposes to establish a prospective, multicenter clinical cohort of secondary infections in cirrhosis, map infection pathogens, correlate the characteristics of the underlying immune status with the pathogen profiles of secondary infections, and set up an early warning system of secondary infection surveillance, with the aim of early prevention and early recognition of secondary infections, and improvement of prognosis for patients with liver cirrhosis.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2024-03-01
Primary completion
2026-11-01
Completion
2026-11-01
First posted
2024-02-28
Last updated
2024-03-04

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06279845. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.