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Randomized Study of Acetylcysteine in Patients With Acute Liver Failure Not Caused by Acetaminophen
This study has been completed.
Study NCT00004467   Information provided by National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
First Received: October 18, 1999   Last Updated: November 3, 2009   History of Changes

October 18, 1999
November 3, 2009
June 1998
November 2006   (final data collection date for primary outcome measure)
Overall survival rate [ Time Frame: 3 weeks ] [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]
Same as current
Complete list of historical versions of study NCT00004467 on ClinicalTrials.gov Archive Site
  • Survival without liver transplantation (Spontaneous Survival [ Time Frame: 3 weeks ] [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]
  • Transplant rate [ Time Frame: 3 weeks ] [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]
  • Length of hospital stay [ Time Frame: 3 weeks ] [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]
  • Number of organ systems showing failure [ Time Frame: 3 weeks ] [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]
Same as current
 
Randomized Study of Acetylcysteine in Patients With Acute Liver Failure Not Caused by Acetaminophen
 

OBJECTIVES:

I. Determine the safety and efficacy of a short course (72 hours) of intravenous acetylcysteine in patients with acute liver failure for whom no antidote or specific treatment is available.

PROTOCOL OUTLINE: This is a randomized, multicenter study. Patients are randomized to receive intravenous acetylcysteine or placebo for 72 hours. Treatment must begin within 12 hours of hospitalization. Patients who advance to grade III or IV encephalopathy are eligible for liver transplantation.

Patients are followed at 3 weeks.

Phase III
Interventional
Treatment, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo Control
Acute Liver Failure
Drug: acetylcysteine
 
Lee WM, Hynan LS, Rossaro L, Fontana RJ, Stravitz RT, Larson AM, Davern TJ 2nd, Murray NG, McCashland T, Reisch JS, Robuck PR; Acute Liver Failure Study Group. Intravenous N-acetylcysteine improves transplant-free survival in early stage non-acetaminophen acute liver failure. Gastroenterology. 2009 Sep;137(3):856-64, 864.e1. Epub 2009 Jun 12.

*   Includes publications given by the data provider as well as publications identified by National Clinical Trials Identifier (NCT ID) in Medline.
 
Completed
173
November 2006
November 2006   (final data collection date for primary outcome measure)

Inclusion Criteria

This is a phase III blinded study, which will involve approximately 200 patients. For this purpose, acute liver failure will be defined as onset of any mental status alteration and coagulopathy (INR > 1.5) within 26 weeks of onset of a hepatitic illness, with no evidence of underlying chronic liver disease. Eligible patients will be those admitted to study site hospital intensive care units with acute liver failure and who can be evaluated and started on treatment within the first 24 hours of hospitalization or those who evolve to altered mentation if already in the hospital. All subjects will be between 18 and 70 years. Patients transferred from referring hospitals to a study site may be considered for enrollment, provided that no other specific treatment protocol has begun, and that no liver support device (BAL, ELAD, transgenic pig perfusion) has been used or is contemplated. Use of fresh frozen plasma infusions will not disqualify patients from participation.

Exclusion Criteria

  1. Patients less than age 18 or over 70 years of age.
  2. ALF patients where acetaminophen or mushroom poisoning is assessed or Suspected to be a significant contributing or sole cause of the illness. Both these diagnoses require specific antidote therapy, including NAC in the case of acetaminophen, rather than randomized or non-specific treatment.
  3. Patients with a diagnosis of shock liver (ischemic hepatopathy), since the overall outcome for these patients in largely determined by the underlying etiology of the condition leading to shock. Heat stroke is not excluded.
  4. Acute liver failure of pregnancy or the HELLP syndrome (pregnancy associated hemolysis and coagulopathy). The effect of NAC on the fetus or the mother has not been determined; in addition, pregnancy-related liver diseases usually mandate rapid delivery of the infant.
  5. ALF thought secondary to intrahepatic malignancy. Patients with hepatic malignancy experiencing ALF have 100% mortality and are not transplant candidates.
  6. Patients who exhibit signs of cerebral herniation at the time of enrollment.
  7. Patients who demonstrate the presence of intractable arterial hypotension (arterial systolic blood pressure equal to or below 70 mmHg) present, or require inotropic drugs at the time of enrollment.
  8. Severe sepsis (temperature >39o C and/or significant bacteremia) present at the time of enrollment.

In general, ALF patients comprise somewhat more women than men, but there is no preponderance of any racial group, other than that expected on the basis of geographic differences. No exclusion will be made on the basis of race, ethnic group or gender. Criteria for inclusion of women and minorities will be those established in the NIH guidelines. Each study site will provide for review a log of patients considered for the NAC study with no identifiers, yielding only gender and age, race and reason for not participating as a check on gender or ethnic bias.

Both
18 Years to 70 Years
No
Contact information is only displayed when the study is recruiting subjects
United States
 
NCT00004467
 
199/13925 DK52827, UTSMC-1R03DK52827, UTSMC-IRB-0697-27200
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
University of Texas
Study Chair: William M. Lee, MD University of Texas
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
November 2009

ICMJE     Data element required by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and the World Health Organization ICTRP