ICHARUS: Italian Cooperative HemoAdsorption Study for Relief of Uremic Symptoms
ICHARUS: Italian Cooperative HemoAdsorption Study for Relief of Uremic Symptoms. A Prospective Observational Cohort Study to Assess the Effectiveness and Safety of Hemoadsorption in Chronic Hemodialysis Patients With Refractory Uremic Symptoms: An Italian Real-World Registry.
Azienda Ospedaliera Brotzu
120 participants
Mar 15, 2026
OBSERVATIONAL
Conditions
Summary
Background: Many patients receiving maintenance hemodialysis continue to experience persistent uremic symptoms, such as pruritus, fatigue, sleep disorders, reduced physical performance, and impaired quality of life, despite optimized dialysis prescriptions. Conventional dialysis techniques mainly rely on diffusion and convection and may be insufficient to remove certain uremic toxins, particularly protein-bound and middle-molecule solutes. Purpose: The ICHARUS study (Italian Cooperative HemoAdsorption Study for Relief of Uremic Symptoms) is a prospective, observational, real-world registry designed to evaluate the clinical use of hemodialysis combined with hemoadsorption (HAHD) in patients with persistent uremic symptoms. Study design: ICHARUS is a multicenter registry enrolling adult patients on maintenance hemodialysis in whom hemoadsorption is prescribed according to routine clinical practice. Hemoadsorption is added to standard dialysis sessions without modifying the underlying dialysis modality or prescription. The study does not involve randomization or experimental interventions. Outcomes: The registry will collect data on patient-reported symptoms, quality of life, selected laboratory parameters, and safety outcomes at baseline and during follow-up at 1, 3, and 6 months. The aim is to describe symptom evolution, tolerability, and real-world treatment patterns associated with HAHD. Significance: By collecting standardized real-world data across multiple centers, the ICHARUS registry aims to improve understanding of the potential role of hemoadsorption in chronic hemodialysis, support harmonization of clinical practice, and generate hypotheses for future interventional studies.
Eligibility
Plain Language Summary
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NCT07522008