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Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is a growing public health problem that affects more than 5% of the population and can lead to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. These patients are at greater risk of cardiovascular and hepatic death, and higher rates of neoplasms, both gastrointestinal and extra-intestinal. The standard treatment is weight loss with diet and physical exercise, which has shown a histological and analytical improvement in patients who achieve a 5-10% reduction in body weight. However, less than 25% of subjects achieve this goal. Restrictive surgical treatments and gastric bypass have achieved, in obese patients, an improvement in metabolic syndrome, insulin resistance and liver histology, but in patients with liver cirrhosis the morbidity-mortality of this surgery is high. Currently, endoscopic techniques are being developed, which are less invasive and have fewer complications, and which also achieve gastric restriction with similar characteristics to those obtained by the surgical method. Among them is the tubulization or vertical gastroplasty with the OverStitch system (Apollo Endosurgery, Austin, TX, USA). However, this method has not been evaluated in patients with obesity and/or metabolic syndrome and NASH cirrhosis. For this reason, the main objective of the investigators study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of endoscopic gastroplasty in improving metabolic factors and liver histology in patients with obesity with or without metabolic syndrome and NASH-compensated cirrhosis.
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Inclusion criteria
Subjects between the ages of 18 and 65 (inclusive) at the time of the first selection visit 2) They must provide a signed written informed consent and agree to comply with the study protocol.
Subjects with a BMI greater than 30 kg/m2 whether or not associated with metabolic risk factors (MD, hypertension, dyslipemia).
Confirmed diagnosis of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis with a degree of fibrosis 4 according to the NASH CRN staging system in a liver biopsy obtained in the 12 months prior to the endoscopic procedure or during the screening period.
Absence of other causes of chronic liver disease (alcoholic, viral, autoimmune, cholestatic disease, Wilson's disease, α1AT deficit, hemochromatosis)
Exclusion criteria
Pregnancy. 15) Refusal to give informed consent. 16) Any medical condition that could reduce life expectancy to less than 2 years, including known cancers.
Indications of any other untreated, unstable or clinically significant immunological, endocrine, haematological, gastrointestinal, neurological, neoplastic or psychiatric disease.
Mental instability or incompetence such that the validity of the informed consent or the ability to comply with the study is uncertain.
Positive antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus. 20) Data on decompensated liver disease:
10 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Paula Iruzubieta, MD, PhD; Lucia Lavín Alconero, MBs, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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