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The goal of this clinical trial is to test the MEX-CD1 hemodialysis medical device in patients suffering from Wilson's Disease. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Depending on the severity of their symptoms, patients will receive either 5 or 10 treatments on consecutive days with the MEX-CD1 hemodialysis medical device.
Full description
This study investigates the performance and safety of the MEX-CD1 hemodialysis device in patients suffering from Wilson's Disease. Wilson's Disease is a rare genetic disease (1'000 to 2'000 patients in France) linked to a problem in copper homeostasis. The direct consequence is a progressive accumulation of copper, first in the liver and then in the whole body with two major implications: (i) at the hepatic level and (ii) at the neurological level.
The disease is globally well known and managed in developed countries. It can present itself in several manners:
An acute decompensation of the disease is possible. This concerns mainly big children or young adults, presenting themselves with an acute hepatic deficiency that may need intensive care and a liver transplant.
In most cases, the clinical picture is one of chronic hepatic and/or neurological disease. Treatment must be adapted to the clinical situation. Two phases can be distinguished:
This lifelong treatment is to be taken daily (with doses of chelators and/or zinc salts).
Finally, during the maintenance phase, periods of lesser observance or escape phases can be observed, those are responsible for severe aggravation of the liver (fulminant hepatitis) or of neurological symptoms that can lead to death.
The proposed medical device allows, by combining dialysis to a hyper-chelating colloidal dialysate (MEX-CD1) to specifically extract copper from the blood (and particularly the exchangeable copper). All patients enrolled in this study will, depending on the severity of their symptoms, receive 4-hour long treatments with MEX-CD1:
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1 participants in 1 patient group
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Karen Gillant
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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