sCD163 in PBC Patients - Assessment of Treatment Response

NCT ID: NCT02931513

Last Updated: 2022-08-12

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

RECRUITING

Total Enrollment

40 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

2016-09-30

Study Completion Date

2031-09-30

Brief Summary

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Primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) is an autoimmune chronic liver disease, characterised by destruction of the small intrahepatic bile ducts. Ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) is the first line treatment for patients with PBC. However, up to 40% of patients respond inadequate to this treatment.

sCD163 is a macrophage activation marker shedded into plasma by macrophages in the liver. sMR is a soluble mannose receptor. The investigators want to investigate whether sCD163 and sMR can predict response to treatment with UDCA in newly diagnosed patients with PBC.

Detailed Description

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Primary biliary cholangitis (PBC, previously called 'primary biliary cirrhosis') is an autoimmune cholestatic liver disease characterized by destruction of intrahepatic bile ducts and progression to liver fibrosis and cirrhosis. In the pre-cirrhotic phase, fatigue and pruritus are the dominant symptoms. These symptoms reduce PBC patients' quality of life, but the extent to which they cause the patient to leave the work force and seek disability pension is unknown. The diagnosis of PBC is based on the presence of two of three major criteria; unexplained serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) \>1.5 times upper normal limit for more than 24 weeks, presence of anti-mitochondrial antibodies (AMA), and compatible liver histology. Multiple models have been conducted to predict prognosis in patients with PBC. The Mayo risk score is the best validated and includes information on age, bilirubin, albumin, prothrombin time and peripheral oedema. Other prognostic factors are pruritus and fatigue at diagnosis that predict the time to develop cirrhosis and its complications.

Ursodeoxycholic acid is the first line treatment for all patients with PBC. Response to treatment is assessed after 12 months of treatment using e.g. the Paris 1 criteria (ALP \<3 times upper normal limit, AST \<2 times upper normal limit, and bilirubin ≤1 mg/dL after one year of treatment). Up to 40% of patients respond inadequately to UDCA and need add-on therapies. (e.g. fibrates, budenosid or obeticholic acid).

In PBC, inflammation is attributed to an immune response to mitochondrial autoantigens followed by a serologic response of anti-mitochondrial antibodies (AMAs); and accompanied by inflammation of small bile ducts. The pathogenesis includes both CD4 and CD8 cells, which in the presence of biliary cells expressing the 2-oxo-dehydrogenase pathway (PDC-E2) activates macrophages via granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor. The activated macrophages, together with AMAs, produce a proinflammatory response with subsequent liver inflammation and fibrosis. Thus, macrophages seem to be involved in PBC disease severity and progression. However, macrophage activation markers have not previously been investigated in PBC patients. The investigators in our research group have during the last years investigated the macrophage activation marker sCD163. The group have shown increased levels in relation to liver fibrosis/cirrhosis in patients with chronic viral hepatitis (HBV and HCV), non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD/NASH) and alcoholic liver disease (alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis) and liver disease severity including risk of portal hypertension and development of complications and mortality. Just recently the investigators' group also demonstrated that the soluble mannose receptor (sMR) and sCD163 are associated with early and long-term prognosis of patients with cirrhosis and acute-on-chronic liver failure.

Aims:

To investigate sCD163 and sMR at diagnosis, before treatment with UDCA, as possible predictors of non-response to UDCA treatment and thus as predictors of patients needing add-on therapy.

Conditions

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Primary Biliary Cirrhosis Liver Inflammation Ursodeoxycholic Acid

Study Design

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Observational Model Type

COHORT

Study Time Perspective

PROSPECTIVE

Study Groups

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PBC patients

Patients with primary biliary cholangitis

Blood samples

Intervention Type OTHER

Fibroscan

Intervention Type DEVICE

Questionnaires

Intervention Type OTHER

Liver biopsy

Intervention Type BIOLOGICAL

Liver biopsy will only be obtained if obtained as part of the diagnosis (will not be obtained for study purpose only)

Interventions

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Blood samples

Intervention Type OTHER

Fibroscan

Intervention Type DEVICE

Questionnaires

Intervention Type OTHER

Liver biopsy

Liver biopsy will only be obtained if obtained as part of the diagnosis (will not be obtained for study purpose only)

Intervention Type BIOLOGICAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Newly diagnosed with Primary biliary cholangitis
* No treatment with UDCA

Exclusion Criteria

* Patient under 18 years
* Expected lifetime under 6 months
* Expected liver transplantation within 6 months
* Liver cancer
* Cirrhosis from other causes
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University of Aarhus

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Locations

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Department of Hepatology and Gastroenterology, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark

Aarhus C, Central Jutland, Denmark

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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Denmark

Central Contacts

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Lars Bossen, PhD-student

Role: CONTACT

+4522800676

Facility Contacts

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Lars Bossen, PhD-student

Role: primary

+45 2280 0676

Other Identifiers

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PBC AU 2

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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