Overview
Efficacy of L-ornithine L-aspartate and Therapeutic Plasma Exchange Versus Plasma Exchange Alone in Lowering Ammonia and Improving Outcomes in Pediatric Acute Liver Failure.
Status:
Not yet recruiting
Not yet recruiting
Trial end date:
2024-10-30
2024-10-30
Target enrollment:
0
0
Participant gender:
All
All
Summary
Pediatric acute liver failure (PALF) is associated with very high mortality and morbidity with native liver survival varying between 21 to 75%.Hyperammonemia manifesting as hepatic encephalopathy and causing cerebral edema isresponsible for poor neurological outcome in ALF. Ammonia lowering measures have led to improvement in HE and higher native liver survival. L-ornithine L-aspartate (LOLA), a salt of natural amino-acids ornithine and aspartate, is an importantammonia scavenging drug. It acts as a substrate for urea cycle in liver and also converts ammonia to glutamine in perivenous hepatocytes as well as in the muscles.This drug has been shown to reduce ammonia and improve hepatic encephalopathy in cirrhoticadults.However, the issue with this drug is that the glutamine formed can reconvert to ammonia by the action of glutaminase, possibly, the reason why it failed to show decrease in ammonia and improvement in native liver survival in a randomized controlled trial in adult ALF. In western countries, ornithine phenylacetate has been used where ornithine converts ammonia to glutamine and phenylacetate then binds to this glutamine to form phenylacetylgutamine and eliminates it. Therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE), both high volume and standard volume has been shown to improve native liver survival in adults with ALF and is the standard of care in management of ALF and a grade 1 recommendation by all eminent liver societies.TPE leads to decreased ammonia. Although rate of ammonia formation is multiple times higher than rate of ammonia removal by plasmapheresis, this ammonia reduction is an indirect effect of glutamine removal by TPE. Glutamine, thus, acts as a reservoir for clearance of ammonia (in muscles and perivenous hepatocytes).In contrast to adults, the response to therapeutic plasma exchange has not been as encouraging inchildren, yet, most centers continue to use it based on recommendations in adults. Based on the knowledge that LOLA converts ammonia to glutamine and TPE clears glutamine from plasma, the investigators hypothesize that LOLA would act in synergestic way with TPE to lower ammonia levels, resulting in improvement in HE and better native liver survival in pediatric ALF. The goal of this clinical trial is to compare L-ornithine L-aspartate and therapeutic plasma exchange versus plasma exchange alone in lowering ammonia and improving outcomes in patients with pediatric acute liver failure.Phase:
N/AAccepts Healthy Volunteers?
NoDetails
Lead Sponsor:
Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences, IndiaTreatments:
N-Methylaspartate
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:- Pediatric Acute Liver Failure as defined by PALF-Study Group
- 5-18 years of age
- INR > 2
- Hepatic encephalopathy (defined by West Haven criteria)
- Ammonia >100mcg/dL
Exclusion Criteria:
- Irreversible neurological injury
- Previous treatment with LOLA within 48 hours before admission.
- Acute kidney injury.
- Acute on chronic liver failure
- Those not giving consent