RecruitingNCT01016613

Clinical Phenotyping Resource and Biobank Core of the Michigan O'Brien Renal Center


Sponsor

University of Michigan

Enrollment

1,800 participants

Start Date

Jan 1, 2009

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects approximately 26 million Americans and disproportionately manifests in specific race and ethnic groups. Patients burdened with CKD have significant morbidity and reduced life expectancy. In addition to excessive suffering and lost productivity, the cost of managing this epidemic has reached $40 billion annually. The recognition that CKD is a major public health problem is reflected in the fourteen objectives outlined in Healthy People 2020 to begin to address the disease burden. Advancement in approaches to halt CKD progression has been slow despite growing global awareness of disease burden. This O'Brien Kidney Research Core will create opportunities for novel insights through characterization of tissue profiles that will define new disease markers and molecular pathways and will be available to all kidney investigators on the www. It will thereby fundamentally alter the starting point for research into prevention of progression of these kidney diseases. C-PROBE is an essential element of the center grant and presents a biomedical resource core consisting of: (1) clinical phenotyping (that is, systematic identification of observable physical and biomedical characteristics) of kidney disease patients including the accurate measurement of kidney function; and (2) a specimen BioBank which will store blood, urine and kidney tissue samples. A key component of C-PROBE is therefore that it contains a proven mechanism to collect samples from high risk groups including minorities, at the institutions of University of Michigan Health System, St. John Hospital, Wayne State University in Michigan, John H. Stroger Hospital in Illinois, Temple University Health System in Pennsylvania, and Levine Children's Hospital in North Carolina. This mechanism will feed the other Cores and provide biomedical investigators with approved projects the access to a dynamic pool of well characterized high risk kidney disease patients and their biological specimens to conduct high caliber translational research.


Eligibility

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is building a large biobank (sample bank) and clinical database of people with chronic kidney disease (CKD) at the University of Michigan, to better understand what causes kidney disease to progress and to develop better treatments. **You may be eligible if...** - You are any age and have chronic kidney disease (shown by high protein in your urine or reduced kidney function on blood tests) - A small number of people without kidney disease are also welcome as healthy controls **You may NOT be eligible if...** - You are currently on hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis - You have had a kidney transplant - You are unable or unwilling to provide consent - You are pregnant or nursing - You have polycystic kidney disease (a specific inherited kidney condition) - You are institutionalized (e.g., in a care facility) - You are currently participating in a blinded clinical drug trial Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Locations(5)

University of Michigan Health System

Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States

Wayne State University

Detroit, Michigan, United States

St. John's Health System

Detroit, Michigan, United States

Levine Children's Hospital

Charlotte, North Carolina, United States

Temple University

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

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NCT01016613


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