Rationale * Patients who recover from an episode of overt HE(OHE) are at risk of recurrent episodes of HE and persistent minimal hepatic encephalopathy, impacting their daily functioning and mental health. * A multicentric pan-India team will evaluate the role of oral branched-chain amino acids (BCAA) vs Rifaximin as secondary prophylaxis following overt HE as compared with improvement in cognitive function. Novelty: * This study is intended to investigate the role of BCAA vs rifaximin as the ideal second-line therapy for HE management, recurrence, and overall health, including cognitive function, depression and anxiety. * The head-to-head comparison of BCAA+lactulose+ pill-placebo vs rifaximin+ lactulose+ powder-placebo ensures minimization of bias and has adequate power to determine rates of recurrence, Objectives: * To assess the 1st breakthrough episode of HE during 6months in BCAA vs rifaximin groups as ideal secondary prophylaxis in HE. Methodology * Double-blind placebo-controlled double-dummy randomized trial of BCAA supplementation vs rifaximin as the ideal second-line therapy in patients with cirrhosis who have recovered from an episode of OHE. Expected Outcome * Ideal second line agent HE prophylaxis (rifaximin or BCAA) following 1st line lactulose is unclear in an Indian context where dysbiosis and sarcopenia are prevalent, and cost of therapy needs to be optimized. * Optimal HE management prevents recurrence episodes of HE, and improves prognosis, neurocognitive function, and overall health-related quality of life(HRQOL). * Creation of a management algorithm based deductive models incorporating etiology and severity of liver disease, cognitive performance, sarcopenia, and ammonia, and neuropsychiatric impact of using BCAA vs Rifaximin will be created.
Hepatic encephalopathy (HE), a complex neuropsychiatric syndrome arising from liver dysfunction and the establishment of portosystemic shunts (PSS), presents a significant clinical challenge, marked by a spectrum of cognitive, emotional, and motor disturbances. These conditions necessitate precise diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to mitigate its impact on patient well-being and quality of life. * The prevalence of OHE at the time of diagnosis of cirrhosis is 10%-14% in general, 16%-21% in those with decompensated cirrhosis. The cumulated numbers indicate that OHE will occur in 30%-40% of those with cirrhosis at some time during their clinical course and in the survivors in most cases repeatedly. Minimal HE (MHE) or covert HE (CHE) occurs in 20%-80% of patients with cirrhosis. This high incidence rate calls for effective, accessible, and cost-efficient treatment modalities to improve patient outcomes and quality of life. * Indian patients have sarcopenia and reduced muscle strength impairing peripheral ammonia metabolism, and also have gut dysbiosis which can predispose to another episode of HE. A critical initial step in addressing HE involves the identification of precipitating factors, with evidence suggesting that reversible elements contribute to over 80% of HE cases. * Current therapeutic interventions primarily target the reduction of blood ammonia levels, yet the effectiveness of these treatments varies, underscoring the necessity for ongoing research and innovation in HE management. * Patients recovering from OHE are at risk of recurrent episodes and may suffer from persistent MHE, a condition often undiagnosed due to its subtle cognitive manifestations. Such individuals may have cognitive impairment that affect patients' daily functioning and mental health, necessitating the development of standardized diagnostic psychometric tests protocols tailored to diverse populations. * Mainstay for treatment of HE has been lactulose or lactitol. How lactulose acts in HE has been a matter of debate and various hypotheses have been postulated. Inglefenger et al., suggested it to be due to proliferation of Lactobacillus with inhibition of Bacteroides and other organisms (28). Lactulose has pleiotropic effects, and reduction of ammonia is only one of the ways in which it acts on HE. * Rifaximin is an oral antibiotic having \<0.4% of systemic absorption. It acts against coliforms like Escherichia coli and plays a role in the reduction of ammonia levels and prevention of recurrence of HE . Several trials have compared Rifaximin as a therapy of HE with placebo, neomycin and non-absorbable disaccharides . Rifaximin emerged as a promising alternative, showing comparable efficacy in managing OHE and preventing its recurrence.. * This is a double-blind, randomized placebo-controlled trial of branched-chain amino acid supplementation vs rifaximin as the ideal second-line therapy in patients with cirrhosis who have recovered from an episode of overt hepatic encephalopathy, with either drug given over 12 weeks with endpoints being prevention of recurrence of another episode of HE, efficacy, safety, and improvement in neurocognitive function
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
336
The active drug BCAA supplement will be dispensed in a dose of 15 gm once daily x 12 weeks
Active drug rifaximin will be dispensed in a dose of 550mg twice daily x 12 weeks
Both groups will be treated with will be treated with 30-60 ml lactulose three times a day to ensure passage of 2-3 semisoft stools per day
A placebo comparator of 15 gm of skimmed milk powder will be used.
Identical placebo sugar pills will be used as a placebo.
PGIMER
Chandigarh, India
RECRUITINGNumber of breakthrough event of overt hepatic encephalopathy in BCAA vs rifaximin arm
Time to a breakthrough overt HE episode will be the duration (number of days) from time of first dose of study drug to the first breakthrough overt HE episode. The number of events of a first breakthrough overt HE episode during the treatment period will be assessed
Time frame: 24 Weeks
Computerized Cognitive Test battery for Cognitive performance
A curated Computer based Cognitive test battery has been created for this protocol with a fixed set of tasks comprising Animal Naming Test, reaction times, digit span and number connection tests. This has been designed using the PEBL opensource language. Psychology Experiment Building Language. \[2019-03\] PEBL Version 2.1. The battery has been validated by us previously in patients with chronic hepatitis C infection.
Time frame: At Enrolment
Computerized Cognitive Test battery for Cognitive performance
Computerized Cognitive Test battery: A curated Computer based Cognitive test battery has been created for this protocol with a fixed set of tasks comprising Animal Naming Test, reaction times, digit span and number connection tests. This has been designed using the PEBL opensource language. Psychology Experiment Building Language. \[2019-03\] PEBL Version 2.1. The battery has been validated by us previously in patients with chronic hepatitis C infection.
Time frame: 30 days
Computerized Cognitive Test battery for Cognitive performance
Computerized Cognitive Test battery A curated Computer based Cognitive test battery has been created for this protocol with a fixed set of tasks comprising Animal Naming Test, reaction times, digit span and number connection tests. This has been designed using the PEBL opensource language. Psychology Experiment Building Language. \[2019-03\] PEBL Version 2.1. The battery has been validated by us previously in patients with chronic hepatitis C infection.
Time frame: 90 days
Psychiatric Assessment
Beck's Depression Inventory (BDI) test will be performed. The scoring is as follows 1-10: These ups and downs are considered normal 11-16: Mild mood disturbance 17-20: Borderline clinical depression 21-30: Moderate depression31-40: Severe depression 40: Extreme depression
Time frame: 0 days
Psychiatric Assessment
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD 7 score) will be performed. It has 7 questions. Using the threshold score of 10, the GAD-7 has a sensitivity of 89% and a specificity of 82% for GAD
Time frame: 0 days
Psychiatric Assessment
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD 7 score) test will be performed
Time frame: 30 days
Psychiatric Assessment
Beck's Depression Inventory (BDI) test will be performed. The scoring is as follows 1-10: These ups and downs are considered normal 11-16: Mild mood disturbance 17-20: Borderline clinical depression 21-30: Moderate depression31-40: Severe depression 40: Extreme depression
Time frame: 30 days
Psychiatric Assessment
Beck's Depression Inventory (BDI)test will be performed The scoring is as follows 1-10: These ups and downs are considered normal 11-16: Mild mood disturbance 17-20: Borderline clinical depression 21-30: Moderate depression31-40: Severe depression 40: Extreme depression
Time frame: 90 days
Psychiatric Assessment
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD 7 score) tests will be performed
Time frame: 90 days
HRQOL will be performed by SF-36
Health related query of life will be performed.
Time frame: 0 days
HRQOL will be performed by SF-36
Health related query of life will be performed.
Time frame: 30 days
HRQOL will be performed by SF-36
Health related query of life will be performed.
Time frame: 90 days
Assessment of changes in ammonia
Estimation of ammonia by arterial fasting test/ capillary test will be performed
Time frame: At enrolment
Assessment of changes in ammonia
Estimation of ammonia by arterial fasting test/ capillary test will be performed
Time frame: 24 week
Assessment of changes in muscle health
Estimation of sarcopenia will be performed by muscle ultrasound by SARCUS.
Time frame: Baseline
Assessment of changes in muscle health
Estimation of sarcopenia by muscle ultrasound by SARCUS.
Time frame: 30 days
Assessment of changes in muscle health
Estimation of sarcopenia by muscle ultrasound by SARCUS.
Time frame: 90 days
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.