Acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) is a serious condition in which patients with chronic liver disease suddenly develop severe liver injury, leading to inflammation, organ failure, and very high short-term mortality. Standard medical treatment can help, but many patients still do poorly without liver transplantation. This study will test whether Double Plasma Molecular Adsorption System (DPMAS), an extracorporeal blood purification therapy, can improve outcomes in ACLF patients. DPMAS works by filtering the blood through special adsorption columns that remove harmful substances such as bile acids, toxins, and inflammatory molecules. In this randomized controlled trial, adult patients with ACLF will be randomly assigned to receive either: Standard medical therapy alone, or Standard medical therapy plus DPMAS. The main goal is to see whether DPMAS can improve liver function and reduce disease severity within 14 days. Other outcomes include survival without liver transplant at 28 days, improvement in organ functions, reduction in inflammation, and safety of the procedure. The study will be conducted at the Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences (ILBS), New Delhi, India, and will enroll about 56 participants over one year.
Acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) is characterized by acute deterioration of liver function in patients with chronic liver disease, leading to systemic inflammation, organ failure, and high short-term mortality. Current treatment is largely supportive, and liver transplantation is often the only curative option, but many patients are not eligible or die while awaiting transplant. Recent evidence suggests that systemic inflammation, bile acid accumulation, and damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) play key roles in the progression of ACLF. Extracorporeal liver support systems such as plasma exchange have shown benefit in selected patients by reducing inflammation and improving short-term survival. The Double Plasma Molecular Adsorption System (DPMAS) is a novel extracorporeal therapy that combines plasma separation with sequential adsorption columns. These columns are designed to remove bile acids, bilirubin, cytokines, and other toxins from the circulation. Early studies suggest that DPMAS may improve organ function and reduce mortality in ACLF. This prospective, open-label, randomized controlled trial will compare standard medical therapy (SMT) alone versus SMT plus DPMAS in adult patients with ACLF (AARC grade II or higher). The primary outcome is an improvement in AARC grade by 1 at day 14 (7 days off treatment). Secondary outcomes include transplant-free survival at 28 days, changes in systemic inflammation, renal and hemodynamic function, bilirubin and bile acid levels, development of infections or new organ failures, and safety of the therapy. A total of 56 participants will be enrolled and randomized equally into the two study groups. Patients in the intervention arm will undergo a minimum of two DPMAS sessions within the first seven days, with additional sessions as clinically indicated. Participants will be followed for up to 90 days for survival and clinical outcomes. The study is investigator-initiated and conducted at the Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences (ILBS), New Delhi, India. Ethical approval has been obtained from the ILBS Institutional Ethics Committee.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
56
Standard medical therapy includes nutritional support (25-30 kcal/kg/day), lactulose, bowel wash, albumin, vasopressors (norepinephrine/terlipressin), antibiotics, antivirals for HBV reactivation, renal replacement therapy, and intensive care support as per institutional guidelines.
DPMAS therapy uses extracorporeal liver support with two sequential hemoadsorption cartridges (BS330 ion exchange resin and HA330-II neutral macroporous adsorption resin). Minimum 2 sessions (3-4 hours each) are performed within the first 7 days, with additional sessions if partial response is observed.
Improvement in AARC ACLF grade by one at day 14 (after 7 days off treatment)
Proportion of participants who show an improvement of at least one grade in the Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver acute-on-chronic liver failure (AARC ACLF) score at day 14, assessed after a treatment-free interval of 7 days from randomisation.
Time frame: 14 days
Transplant-free survival
Proportion of participants alive without liver transplantation at 28 days after randomization.
Time frame: 28 Days
Change in cytokine levels
Change in serum cytokine concentrations (IL-6, TNF-α, IL-10) measured by multiplex bead-based immunoassay (e.g., Luminex platform) from baseline to Day 14
Time frame: 14 days
Change in DAMPs
Change in circulating damage-associated molecular patterns (HMGB1 and mitochondrial DNA) measured by ELISA and quantitative PCR, respectively, from baseline to Day 14
Time frame: 14 days
Change in serum bilirubin levels
Change in serum bilirubin concentration from baseline to Day 14.
Time frame: 14 days
Change in serum bile acid levels
Change in serum bile acid concentration from baseline to Day 14.
Time frame: 14 days
Change in serum creatinine levels
Change in serum creatinine concentration from baseline to Day 14.
Time frame: 14 days
Change in urine output
Change in urine output from baseline to Day 14
Time frame: 14 days
Change in mean arterial pressure
Change in mean arterial pressure from baseline to Day 14
Time frame: 14 days
Change in vasopressor requirement
Change in vasopressor requirement from baseline to Day 14
Time frame: 14 days
Incidence of new infections
Number of participants who develop new infections during the follow-up period
Time frame: 28 days
Development of new organ failures
Proportion of participants with new organ failures, assessed using the CLIF-OF score.
Time frame: 28 days
Safety and tolerability of DPMAS
Incidence of adverse events such as hypotension, bleeding, sepsis, metabolic disturbances, or allergic reactions during therapy and follow-up.
Time frame: Upto 90 days
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