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Browse 3,346 clinical trials for kidney disease. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT00458289
Patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) commonly have high concentrations of phosphorous, a mineral, in the blood (hyperphosphatemia). This is a result of their inability to excrete phosphorous by the kidneys. This in turn may result in the development of a condition known as secondary hyperparathyroidism and renal osteodystrophy or bone disease. As such, these patients often receive medications known as phosphate binders such as calcium carbonate or acetate, sevelamer, aluminum hydroxide and lanthanum carbonate to manage and treat hyperphosphatemia. Lanthanum carbonate is a newly available phosphate binding agent that is effective in the management of hyperphosphatemia and preventing secondary hyperparathyroidism. It works in the gastrointestinal tract by binding to the phosphorus in the diet. ESRD patients taking lanthanum carbonate are counseled to chew the tablets completely before swallowing, with or immediately after meals. However, patients who are intubated or receiving nutrition via feeding tubes are unable to chew the tablets. For these patients, medications are commonly crushed and administered via the tube. Moreover, some patients prefer to crush the tablets and mix it with food instead of chewing. To date, it is not known if crushing the lanthanum carbonate tablets prior to administration and taking it with food would be as effective as chewing them. The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy of phosphate binding between chewed and crushed lanthanum carbonate tablets.
NCT03408639
This Phase III, randomized, two-armed, parallel, double-blind, active-controlled clinical trial is designed to compare efficacy and safety of CinnaPoietin® (Beta erythropoietin) and Eprex® (epoetin alpha) on the treatment of anemia in 156 End-Stage Renal Disease hemodialysis patients. 156 patients have been planned to randomize and assign to receive CinnaPoietin® or Eprex® for a 26-week period. Administration dose for patients who are treated with erythropoietin is the similar dose of the previously administered amount (IV or SC without any change). After then, dose adjustment will be made based on patients' response. The primary objective of this study is to compare the efficacy of CinnaPoietin® with Eprex®. The secondary objectives of this study are further comparison and evaluation of efficacy along with safety between CinnaPoietin® and Eprex®.