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Evaluation of the Impact of an Alteration of NAD+ Metabolism on the Renal Prognosis of Patients Admitted to Intensive Care (NI-AKI)

R

Ramsay Générale de Santé

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

NAD
Acute Renal Insufficiency

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: Urine sample
Other: Phone call at day 28

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07203131
2023-A01709-36

Details and patient eligibility

About

Among all patients admitted to intensive care, it is estimated that more than half of them are exposed during their stay to acute renal failure (ARF). Impacting the vital prognosis to short term, the occurrence of renal failure is not without consequences in intensive care survivors, presenting an increased risk of death mainly mediated by an excess risk with regard to chronic kidney disease and/or certain cardiovascular pathologies.

Malnutrition, particularly vitamin deficiency, has already been reported as a risk factor for AKI. Studies on two models (animal and human) have recently highlighted the importance of NAD+ production failure in the onset of renal failure.

NAD+ synthesis can be done from tryptophan or via a salvage pathway from vitamin PP.

In a phase 2 study in patients undergoing cardiac surgery, vitamin B3 supplementation was accompanied by a reduction in the occurrence of AKI and a limitation of the duration / intensity of renal dysfunction.

This innovative research aims to identify an alteration in the metabolic pathway of NAD+ production as a risk factor for AKI in intensive care patients. This would be the first study to address this issue in this specific population.

The main objective of this research is to describe the association between the urinary Quinolinate/Tryptophan ratio on admission and the occurrence of acute renal failure in patients admitted to intensive care unit.

Enrollment

150 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patient, male or female aged over 18,
  • Patient admitted to intensive care for a reason with a high risk of ARI: shock, sepsis, cardio-circulatory arrest, post-operative unscheduled surgery, post-operative cardiac surgery,
  • Patient with normal renal function on admission,
  • Patient affiliated to or beneficiary of a social security scheme,
  • Patient having been informed and having given his/her free, informed and written consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Minor patient,
  • History of chronic kidney disease,
  • History of kidney transplant,
  • Admission for a reason with a low risk of ARI (neuroresuscitation, voluntary drug intoxication with anxiolytics - antidepressants - psychotropic drugs),
  • Acute non-infectious respiratory failure, (scheduled surgery other than cardiac surgery)
  • Patient hospitalized without consent,
  • Patient in a period of exclusion due to another research still in progress at the time of inclusion,
  • Protected patient: adult under guardianship, curatorship or other legal protection, deprived of liberty by judicial or administrative decision,
  • Pregnant, breastfeeding or parturient woman.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Screening

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

150 participants in 1 patient group

Patient admitted to intensive care for a high-risk reason of ARI
Experimental group
Description:
Patient admitted to intensive care for a high-risk reason of ARI : Shock, Sepsis, Cardiovascular arrest, Post-operative unscheduled surgery, Post-operative cardiac surgery
Treatment:
Other: Phone call at day 28
Diagnostic Test: Urine sample

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Matthieu JAMME, Dr

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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