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The study is aimed to evaluate the additional role of ciprofloxacin therapy in severe alcoholic hepatitis combined to prednisolone therapy in an open-label placebo controlled manner.
Full description
Introduction: Alcoholic hepatitis (AH) is an inflammatory liver injury associated with longstanding excess alcohol consumption. Disease spectrum varies from asymptomatic transaminase elevations to fulminate liver failure. In hospital mortality in patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis not responding to corticosteroids is over 30 %.
Alcohol increases gut permeability and promotes the translocation of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from the gut lumen the portal vein, and further to Kupffer cells, where LPS binds to CD14, ultimately activating multiple cytokine genes.
Diagnosis of AH is based on history of heavy alcohol use, symptoms like jaundice and on typical laboratory findings, and in uncertain cases on liver biopsy.
Determination of the severity of alcoholic hepatitis is essential for assessment of the disease prognosis and selection therapy. Cessation of alcohol consumption is mandatory for further therapy. Several scoring systems are available to assess the severity and the prognosis of alcohol hepatitis. Maddrey discrimination function (DF) is most widely used and enables to identify patients with severe alcohol hepatitis responding to corticosteroid therapy.
The first line therapy in severe alcoholic hepatitis (DF≥32) is prednisolone. However, those not responding to steroids have 77 % 6 months mortality.
New treatment options for severe AH are desperately needed. Although increased bacterial and LPS translocation are considered to have central role in the pathogenesis of AH no controlled studies of antibiotics in alcoholic hepatitis has been published. In Finland 600 AH requiring hospitalization are diagnosed annually.
Study objective: To evaluate to additional role of ciprofloxacin therapy in severe alcoholic hepatitis combined to prednisolone therapy.
Moreover, we try to find new and better predictors for liver injury and treatment response.
Patients: 150 AH patients, with Maddrey DF >32.
Randomization: Patients with severe AH are randomized at hospitalization 1:1 to receive:
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Inclusion criteria
Severe alcoholic hepatitis; Maddrey above 300
Exclusion criteria
Viral hepatitis Remarkable bleeding in the gastrointestinal tract Serious bacterial infection Hepatorenal syndrome Earlier participation in this study Malignant disease not in remission Other liver disease affecting remarkably the outcome of alcoholic liver disease Mental retardation
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Interventional model
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22 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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