Mechanistic Study on the Protective and Regenerative Effects of Spirulina in Hepatectomy-Related Liver Injury
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if spirulina can help protect the liver and promote recovery after partial hepatectomy (surgery to remove part of the liver). It will also learn about the safety of spirulina in patients undergoing liver surgery. The main questions it aims to answer are: Does spirulina help improve liver function after surgery? Does spirulina promote liver regeneration and reduce inflammation? What side effects, if any, occur when participants take spirulina? Researchers will compare spirulina tablets to a placebo (a look-alike tablet that contains no spirulina) to see if spirulina helps protect the liver and support recovery after surgery. Participants will: Take spirulina or placebo tablets daily for 3 weeks before and 3 weeks after surgery. Provide blood and stool samples before and after treatment. Allow the collection of a small piece of liver tissue (from surgical waste) for analysis. Have regular clinic visits for checkups, blood tests, and safety monitoring.
• Diagnosed with cholangiocarcinoma (bile duct cell carcinoma).
• Child-Pugh Class A liver function.
• Planned to receive neoadjuvant therapy with gemcitabine + oxaliplatin, combined with lenvatinib and a PD-1 inhibitor, followed by anatomical hemihepatectomy (remaining liver volume \> 40%).
• Age 18-75 years, male or female. Willing and able to comply with the study protocol, including oral administration of spirulina or placebo for 3 weeks before and 3 weeks after surgery.
• Voluntarily agrees to participate and signs written informed consent.
• Has had no acute illness or significant symptom worsening within 4 weeks before enrollment.