ELAD for treatment of alcohol induced liver decompensation (VTL-308)

  • Research type

    Research Study

  • Full title

    VTL-308, A Randomized, Open-Label, Multicenter, Controlled, Pivotal Study to Assess Safety and Efficacy of ELAD in Subjects with Alcohol-Induced Liver Decompensation (AILD)

  • IRAS ID

    191754

  • Contact name

    Stephen Ryder

  • Contact email

    Stephen.ryder@nuh.nhs.uk

  • Sponsor organisation

    Vital Therapies Inc

  • Eudract number

    2015-004529-14

  • Duration of Study in the UK

    6 years, 10 months, 27 days

  • Research summary

    Acute decompensation of liver function can occur when alcohol is consumed by patients with alcoholic liver disease, and also by patients with chronic liver disease due to other etiologies. These patients, described for the purpose of this study as suffering from alcohol induced liver decompensation (AILD).\nTreatment options for patients with AILD are limited. Regimens that have been used for the past 40 years, including corticosteroids, theophylline with corticosteroids, pentoxifylline and infliximab, have had no significant effect on the long term survival of patients with AILD. Steroid use has been associated with an increased rate of infections, a complication of liver failure.\nConventional therapies such as hemodialysis and hemoperfusion do not correct the metabolic abnormalities that are the hallmark of acute liver failure. Vital Therapies Incorporated (VTL) has developed the ELAD® system that comprises a dialysis type pump system and several “metabolically active” cartridges, each containing thousands of hollow fiber capillaries through which the subject’s plasma “ultrafiltrate” fluid is circulated. ELAD therapy is designed to provide liver support continuously to a subject with compromised liver function, allowing time for the subject’s native liver to regenerate to a healthy state or to stabilize the subject until a suitable donor organ can be found for transplantation.\n\nVTL-308 is a randomized, multicenter, openlabel, controlled, pivotal study designed to provide data on the safety and clinical utility of the ELAD system in the treatment of subjects with AILD. Approximately 150 evaluable subjects meeting the eligibility requirements of the study will be randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive either standard of care treatment for AILD (as defined in the protocol) plus treatment with the ELAD System (ELAD group) or standard of care treatment for AILD alone (Control group).\n

  • REC name

    Yorkshire & The Humber - Leeds West Research Ethics Committee

  • REC reference

    15/YH/0536

  • Date of REC Opinion

    22 Dec 2015

  • REC opinion

    Unfavourable Opinion