Texas Children's Hospital
 
   

    Care Centers

    Overview
    Directory
    Cancer Center
    Fetal Center
    Heart Center
    Maternity Care
    Neurology
    Newborn Center

Bookmark and Share

 
 

TEXAS CHILDREN'S LIVER CENTER
Liver disease research

Included in Texas Children's Liver Center is a comprehensive research component staffed by distinguished researchers dedicated to studying pediatric hepatology issues. Research initiatives focus on treatments and causes of childhood liver disease, improving medical treatments and identifying specific post-transplant problems at an early age.

Because of its comprehensive program and affiliation with the renowned Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children's Liver Center receives funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for pediatric liver disease and gastroenterology research. Our program is the only program in the South to receive funding from the NIH.

Cutting-edge clinical research

Texas Children's Liver Center is among a handful of centers in the nation that participates in National Institutes of Health-funded protocols, including:

> BARC (Biliary Atresia Research Consortium)

> CLIC (Cholestatic Liver Disease Consortium)

> SPLIT (Studies of Pediatric Liver Transplantation)

> PALF (Pediatric Acute Liver Failure Study)

> Therapy of PTLD

> Fatty liver disease

For more information about participating in one of these clinical trials, contact us. 

Research highlights

  • Children who receive liver transplants are at particular risk for infectious diseases because their immune systems are suppressed. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and cytomegalovirus (CMV) are major causes of mortality in these patients. Researchers at Texas Children's Liver Center and the International Center for Cell and Gene Therapy are developing cell-based immunotherapy protocols to restore patients' immune responses to these two viruses in a natural and nontoxic way.

  • Liver tumors from institutions throughout the country are sent to Texas Children's Liver Center for expert review, classification and correlation with therapeutic regimens. The tumors also are examined in Texas Children's Pathology department for molecular genetic abnormalities.

  • The nurses and nurse practitioners of the Liver Center add human dimension to cellular research by studying parental and patient anxiety and coping skills during these very serious chronic illnesses and conditions. Such quality-of-life studies help improve the day-to-day treatment and care of children with liver disease.

  • Many pediatric liver diseases, including cholestatic disorders, are treated with a safe, natural compound ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA). Texas Children's scientists are determining how bile acid works, which will lead to better understanding of the drug and new treatment methods.

  • The causes of many pediatric liver diseases are unknown, but understanding those causes is a primary goal of Texas Children's Liver Center. To discover why children develop liver diseases, researchers are examining genetic and metabolic disturbances, as well as abnormalities in basic liver function.