A Study of ALN-HBV in Healthy Adult Volunteers and Non-cirrhotic Patients With Chronic Hepatitis...
Hepatitis BChronic Hepatitis B4 moreThe purpose of this study is to determine the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of ALN-HBV in healthy adult volunteers and patients with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. In addition, the study will assess antiviral efficacy of ALN-HBV in patients with HBV.
Comparison Between Lamivudine and Entecavir Treatment in Spontaneous Severe Acute Exacerbation
Chronic Hepatitis BThis is a prospective, observational, open-label, 2-arm, parallel, multi-center study. Patients with HBV-associated severe acute exacerbation for whom the treatment with NRTI (such as lamivudine and entecavir) is medically recommended will be screened for eligibility. To target 74 evaluable subjects, approximately 82 patients should be recruited into this trial. After enrollment, all eligible subjects will be randomly assigned to one of the antiviral treatments below. Cohort 1: Lamivudine 100 mg p.o. q.d. Cohort 2: Entecavir 0.5 mg p.o. q.d. This process will be stratified by prolonged PT, < 4 sec / 4-6 sec / > 6 sec. Both lamivudine and entecavir will be taken once daily and the first dose of observational drug should be administered on Day 1. The observational period of individual subject will be 12 weeks; however, both treatments could be continued after the end of study based on physician's clinical judgment. The efficacy and safety data will be collected at baseline, 3, 5, 8, 15, 22, 29, 85, and 180 days after initiation of antiviral treatment. All assessments should be conducted based on routine practice of each hospital. Only the analysis of HBV DNA and anti-HDV will be performed in the central lab. For patients who are willing to provide the residual samples of HBV DNA assessment, the blood samples will be preserved appropriately. All AE(s) and SAE will be followed until resolution or the event is considered stable.
Telbivudine Versus Lamivudine for Maintenance Therapy of Patients With Chronic Hepatitis B and Negative...
HepatitisChronicThe aim of this randomized clinical study is to show non-inferiority of a change of anti-viral therapy from telbivudine to lamivudine in patients who have achieved an undetectable viral load at week 24 of telbivudine therapy compared to continuous treatment with telbivudine with respect to the viral breakthrough rate at week 108 as the primary clinical outcome.
Safety, Tolerability, and Pharmacokinetics of AB-836 in Healthy Subjects and Subjects With Chronic...
Chronic HepatitisThis three-part, Phase 1 protocol will be the first clinical study of AB-836. Parts 1 and 2a/b will be a Phase 1a SAD/MAD of AB-836 in healthy adult subjects. Part 3 will be a Phase 1b dose-ranging assessment of AB-836 in non-cirrhotic Chronic Hepatitis B (CHB) subjects.
Re-treatment of HCV Following DAA Failure
Chronic Hepatitis CHCV infection is treated with oral drugs, termed as 'direct-acting anti-viral agents' (DAAs). In India, four DAAs are available (sofosbuvir [SOF], daclatasvir [DCV], ledipasvir [LDV] and velpatasvir [VEL]). Globally, DAA based regimens have obtained excellent rates of cure. Cure of HCV infection is defined as undetectable HCV RNA 12 weeks after stopping drugs, also referred to as sustained virological response at week 12 (SVR12). Using these DAA based treatment regimens, a small number (up to 5%) of people fail to achieve SVR12 and HCV RNA reappear after a few weeks of stopping the drugs (virological relapse). Data on management of virological relapse are extremely limited, especially in genotype 3, and no guidelines exist regarding re-treatment options for such group. Hence, we plan to re-treat such people using what appear to be the best combination treatment in each situation and to review our experience over time. Participants with chronic HCV infection who relapsed following standard DAA-based treatment regimen will be invited to participate. We propose to re-treat them with the anti-HCV drug combination which appears to be the most suited to his/her clinical profile, based on the current empiric knowledge - the choice of drugs will be based on HCV genotype, the previous treatment regimen and the presence/absence of liver cirrhosis, etc. During anti-HCV treatment, participants will be given expected standard of care and HCV RNA will be tested at 4-week intervals starting from week 4 and till RNA becomes undetectable, and then at the end of treatment and 12 weeks after the treatment was stopped - as is the usual practice during such treatment. Relevant clinical, laboratory and treatment details will be recorded in a pre-defined data collection form. Treatment outcome will be categorized as success (SVR12), treatment failure (any detectable HCV RNA at the end of 24 weeks treatment duration) or relapse (HCV RNA negative at the end of treatment, but positive at 12 weeks after stopping treatment). If possible, a 5-ml blood specimen will be collected before starting re-treatment from all participants; in addition, another similar specimen will be collected following the treatment in those in whom the re-treatment is unsuccessful. These will be stored and may be used in future for virological studies to look for drug-resistance variations.
Hepatitis C Treatment of Inmates
Chronic Hepatitis CHepatitis C infection is a prevalent chronic disease. It is particularly prevalent among intravenous drug abusers. Bergen fengsel is a regional prison housing 250 inmates, of which as many as 70 are recorded HCV RNA PCR positive annuallly. In this study inmate males and females will be randomized to standard screening and initiation procedure, or to a rapid initiation procedure in the hospital's infectious diseases outpatient clinic. The study aims at studying if rapid inclusion will increase the possibility to conclude treatment while the prisoner still is incarcerated, thus improve the chances of reaching a sustained virologic response, compared to standard inclusion, where prisoners, as other out patients will wait for inclusion for several months.
Dynamic Changes of Serum HBV RNA in Chronic Hepatitis B Patients
Chronic Hepatitis B PatientsSome patients with low-level viremia (LLV) are also likely to develop hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) or other liver diseases. The relationship between HBV RNA levels and fibrosis in patients with HBV DNA negative or LLV is still lacking evidence. The purpose of this study is to observe the differences in HBV RNA levels and their association with efficacy in HBV DNA negative or LLV patients. Investigators conduct the prospective, single-center, non-randomized, observational clinical study. A total of 100 chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients who receive antiviral therapy with nucleoside (acid) analogues for 1-3 years will be enrolled. The enrolled patients will be followed up five times to collect clinical data and record adverse events (at baseline, week 12, week 24, week 36 and week 48, respectively).
Performance of Novel Simplified Score for Chronic Hepatitis B Treatment Eligibility in Thailand...
Chronic Hepatitis BInternational and national guideline for chronic hepatitis B (HBV) infection treatment recommend initiated antiviral in high HBV viral loads patients with significant liver inflammation and significant liver fibrosis. In Thailand, HBV viral loads and liver elastography are limited available in seconds to tertiary care hospital. Recently, many of simplified scoring system (TREAT-B score, WHO (World Health Organization)-simplified score and REACH-B score) were developed for assessment of antiviral initiation. This study aim to evaluate the performance of simplified score for chronic HBV treatment compare to Thailand and international standard guideline.
A Study to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of ABT-493/ABT-530 in Adults With Chronic Hepatitis...
Chronic Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) InfectionThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of ABT-493/ABT-530 in adults with genotype 2 chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection.
A Study to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of ABT-493/ABT-530 in Adults With Chronic Hepatitis...
Hepatitis C Virus InfectionChronic Hepatitis C1 moreThe purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of ABT-493/ABT-530 following 12 weeks of treatment in adults with chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infection genotype 1, 2, 4, 5 or 6 infection and compensated cirrhosis.