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A Prospective Database of Infants With Cholestasis

RECRUITINGSponsored by Arbor Research Collaborative for Health
Actively Recruiting
SponsorArbor Research Collaborative for Health
Started2004-04-21
Est. completion2029-05-31
Eligibility
Healthy vol.Accepted
Locations15 sites

Summary

Biliary atresia, idiopathic neonatal hepatitis, and specific genetic cholestatic conditions are the most common causes of jaundice and hyperbilirubinemia that continue beyond the newborn period. The long term goal of the Childhood Liver Disease Research Network (ChiLDReN) is to establish a database of clinical information and plasma, serum, and tissue samples from cholestatic children to facilitate research and to perform clinical, epidemiological and therapeutic trials in these important pediatric liver diseases.

Eligibility

Healthy volunteers accepted
INCLUSION CRITERIA

* Infant's age less than or equal to 180 days at initial presentation at the ChiLDReN clinical site.
* Diagnosis of cholestasis defined by serum direct or conjugated bilirubin greater than or equal to 2 mg/dl and suspected biliary atresia.
* The subject's parent(s)/guardian(s) willing to provide informed written consent.

EXCLUSION CRITERIA

* Acute liver failure.
* Previous hepatobiliary surgery with dissection or excision of biliary tissue.
* Diagnoses of bacterial or fungal sepsis (except where associated with metabolic liver disease)
* Diagnoses of hypoxia, shock or ischemic hepatopathy within the past two weeks (If the cholestasis persists beyond two weeks of the initiating event, the infant can be enrolled).
* Diagnosis of any malignancy.
* Presence of any primary hemolytic disease (except when diagnosed with biliary atresia or another cholestatic disease being studied by ChiLDREN).
* Diagnosis of any drug or Total parenteral nutrition (TPN)-associated cholestasis (except when diagnosed with biliary atresia or another cholestatic disease being studied by ChiLDREN).
* Diagnosis with Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO)-associated cholestasis.
* Birth weight less than 1500g (except when diagnosed with biliary atresia).

Conditions2

Biliary AtresiaLiver Disease

Locations15 sites

Children's Hospital Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California, 90027
Sirikorn Boonsawat323-361-2181sboonsawat@chla.usc.edu
University of California
San Francisco, California, 94143
Children's Hospital Colorado
Aurora, Colorado, 80045
Cynthia Castanon720-777-0587Cynthia.castanon@childrenscolorado.org
Children's Healthcare of Atlanta - Emory University
Atlanta, Georgia, 30322
Katelynn Harris404-785-0421katelynn.harris@choa.org
Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois, 60614
Jacqueline Alexander312-227-3523jaalexander@luriechildrens.org

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