NHS to trial potentially life-saving treatment for deadly liver disease

A picture


The NHS is to trial a potentially life-saving new treatment for a deadly liver disease that causes the body’s vital organs to fail,Thirteen major hospitals will use a device that cleans patients’ blood that has become corrupted by toxins as a result of them developing acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF),ACLF is a severe and hard-to-treat form of liver disease linked to obesity, alcohol and hepatitis, in which patients suddenly deteriorate and have to be admitted to intensive care,Three out of four people affected are only diagnosed when it has already become life-threatening,Seven out of 10 people with the disease die within 28 days and only a handful of those affected are eligible for a liver transplant, which is the only existing way to reverse ACLF.

Seventy-two seriously ill patients will take part in the randomised controlled trial of a machine called Dialive, starting early next year.Doctors involved say that it “offers new hope” and could reduce the condition’s high death rate.If it proves successful, it could become the first form of liver dialysis in global medicine.Dialive seeks to aid recovery by removing dysfunctional albumin – a protein produced by the liver – and replacing it with clean, functional albumin.The “intensive care liver support system” works in a similar way to what happens during haemodialysis, a long-established treatment for people whose kidneys have stopped working properly.

Patients are hooked up to the Dialive device while it removes harmful substances from their blood, which helps their liver and other organs to recover and increases their chances of survival.Those in the trial will already be suffering from two or more organ failures.They will have sessions of treatment on their first, second and third days and then up to four more within the first 10 days.“Our goal is to demonstrate that we can resolve life-threatening ACLF more often and faster than standard care, and thereby impact both patients’ time in hospital and chances of survival,” said Rajiv Jalan, a senior liver specialist and co-principal investigator of the trial who founded Yaqrit, the medical innovation company that developed the device.“These are gravely ill patients with multi-organ failure and high risk of death, so there is a desperate need for effective treatments not only here but all around the world.

“Dialive cleans the blood of toxins that accumulate in the body because the liver is not working and therefore prevents further damage and allows the liver to regenerate”, added Jalan, who is a professor of hepatology at University College London (UCL).Yaqrit is a UCL spinout company that specialises in developing new drugs and devices to treat severe liver disease, which is rising worldwide as a result of soaring obesity, heavy drinking and hepatitis infection.An estimated 2 million people in the UK have some form of liver disease, and rates have quadrupled over the past 50 years.About 60,000 of them have cirrhosis – severe inflammation and scarring – of the liver that puts them at risk of dying.Liver disease kills more than 12,000 people a year.

The government-funded National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) is funding the £2,2m trial after a previous, smaller-scale study in 2023 into its safety and effectiveness found that Dialive showed promise for treating ACLF,Ten of the 15 patients who had the treatment saw their ACLF reversed compared with just five of the 15 who had only standard treatment,Dialive patients also recovered faster than the others,Dr Rohit Saha, a consultant at the Royal Free hospital in London and another trial co-principal investigator, said: “Many [patients with ACLF] die because their bodies become trapped in a destructive cycle of inflammation that current treatments can’t reverse.

“Dialive … offers new hope, with the potential to put this condition into remission and, for the first time in decades, give us a new path forward for our sickest liver patients,”King’s College and University College London hospitals in the capital and the Queen Elizabeth hospital in Birmingham will be the first three of the 13 teaching hospitals to recruit patients,“Thousands of people are admitted to NHS hospitals every year with ACLF and there are three possible outcomes: transplant, death or recovery,Dr Mansoor Bangash, a consultant at the Queen Elizabeth and fellow principal investigator, said: “If we can support more patients to recover, with new devices like Dialive, while simultaneously tackling underlying infections, then we can improve survival rates, stabilise their health and ensure they are in the best possible condition for a transplant-free future,”The NIHR said that it was covering the costs of the trial because, if it works, the device may mean patients with severe liver disease no longer need to have a liver transplant.

Prof Mike Lewis, its scientific director for innovation, said: “Acute-on-chronic liver failure is a dangerous – and often deadly – condition.The only available treatment for it is a transplant, which isn’t always possible or an organ available.“If this NIHR-funded trial of Dialive is successful, it will bring dramatic benefits for patients, providing a treatment for ACLF that will save lives and reduce hospital stay.This is taxpayer-funded research at its best, making treatments on the NHS available when they are needed.”
cultureSee all
A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on a tumultuous year: ‘Don’t know what the American way even is any more’

Late-night hosts reflected on a rollercoaster 2025 and Donald Trump’s combative, primetime year-end address to the nation.Jimmy Kimmel opened his final monologue of 2025 with an emotional reflection on a tumultuous year. “This has been a strange year. It’s been a hard year,” he said. “We’ve had some lows

A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on Trump’s speech: ‘Surprise primetime episode of The Worst Wing’

Late-night hosts discussed – or ignored – Donald Trump’s surprise primetime address and dug further into the explosive new interview the White House chief of staff, Susie Wiles.Jimmy Kimmel opened his Wednesday night show with an acknowledgment of the president’s 9pm ET national address, also known as a “surprise primetime episode of The Worst Wing tonight on every channel”.Trump announced only on Tuesday that he would deliver an impromptu fireside chat during the season finales of Survivor and The Floor. “It’s weird to think that had a couple of states just gone the other way, he’d be hosting one of those shows,” Kimmel joked. “Trump shouldn’t be pre-empting The Floor

A picture

The 50 best albums of 2025: No 3 – Blood Orange: Essex Honey

Dev Hynes’ deeply personal response to his mother’s death embodied the many unexpected shades of grief in pastoral hymnals and post-punk The 50 best albums of 2025 More on the best culture of 2025There’s a lot of grief across the best albums of this year. It’s unsurprising: 2025 has felt like a definitive and dismal break with government accountability, protections for marginalised people and holding back the encroachment of AI in creative and intellectual fields, to cherrypick just a few horrors. Anna von Hausswolff and Rosalía reached for transcendence from these earthly disappointments. Bad Bunny and KeiyaA countered colonial abuse and neglect with writhing resistance anthems. On a more personal scale, Lily Allen and Cate Le Bon grappled with disillusionment about mis-sold romantic ideals

A picture

Arts funding in England must be protected from politics, Hodge report urges

Arts Council England must ensure funding is protected from politicisation and simplify its application process in order to regain trust, a damaging report has found.The investigation into the national body for arts funding found there had been a “loss of respect and trust” for ACE among those it backed, in part because of “perceived political interference in decision-making”.The report was written by the Labour peer Margaret Hodge, who recommended that ACE be retained but with the arm’s-length principle strengthened at all levels of government “to ensure that arts funding is protected from politicisation”.She said: “There have been attempts to exert more political control over ACE decisions in recent years and this has to stop. The Arts Council must remain free from political interference

A picture

The Hodge report into Arts Council England: ‘Not exactly a ringing endorsement’

The arts in England are underfunded, and were dealt a blow by Covid from which many organisations have not yet recovered. But that has been only part of the story. The sheer weight of required form-filling, the endless bureaucracy, the impracticable length of time it takes to simply be funded by Arts Council England (ACE) have caused universal frustration among those working in the arts. There is much talk of exhaustion and burnout.Many organisations have felt frustrated, too, by the strictures of ACE’s flagship strategy, Let’s Create, which, though admirable in principle, with its focus on participation in the arts, is perhaps tilted too far from recognising the expertise and individuality of artists and arts institutions

A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on Trump’s Rob Reiner comments: ‘So hateful and vile’

Late-night hosts reacted to the murder of legendary director Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, as well as Donald Trump’s 10-minute tangent about Christmas snakes.“This is the kind of weekend that makes you wonder if things will ever feel good again,” said Jimmy Kimmel on Monday evening, after a couple days of horrific news: the terror attack at a Hanukkah celebration on Australia’s Bondi Beach, a mass shooting at Brown University in Rhode Island, and the “murder of one of our greatest directors and patriots, Rob Reiner, and his wife, Michele Reiner”.“What we need in a time like this, besides common sense when it comes to guns and mental health care, is compassion and leadership,” he continued. “We did not get that from our president, because he has none of it to give. Instead, we got a fool rambling about nonsense