A Cohort Study in Korean Patients With Chronic Hepatitis B (CHB) Receiving Pegylated Interferon...
Chronic Hepatitis BThe current proposed study aims to bring answers following issues: the antiviral efficacy and safety profiles in Korean Chronic Hepatitis B (CHB) patients who are mostly infected with solely genotype C HBV, a proper duration of Pegasys® therapy post-treatment durability or accumulation of HBeAg seroconversion/HBsAg loss, preventable effect on long-term disease progression to liver cirrhosis and liver cancer. In addition, this study aims to collect more data on the efficacy and safety in a real-life clinical setting of Pegasys® therapy in patients with CHB.
A Comprehensive HBsAg-positive Patients Centered Screening Strategy
Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C (Disorder)HBV(hepatitis B virus) /HCV(hepatitis C virus) co-infection may accelerate liver disease progression and increase the risk of HCC(Hepatocellular Carcinoma)development. It is reported HCV co-infection harmfully affects liver fibrosis in HBV patients, while decompensated cirrhosis is increased in co-infected patients compared with HBV- or HCV- mono-infected patients. One meta-analysis having pooled 39 studies performed in China reported that around 5% of HCC was associated with HCV infection alone and 6% with co-infection of HBV + HCV. However, the exact prevalence of HCV infection in HBsAg(Hepatitis B virus surface antigen)(+) cohort is actually unknown. It is estimated to be between 0.7% and 16%, a percentage that varies over a wide range among several studies from literature, mainly depending on different geographical distribution and study population. However, in regions where HBV is endemic, such as China with a HBsAg positive rate of 7.18%, the probability of co-infection increases due to a similar transmission route, especially in patients with high risk of HCV infection, like dialysis, HIV infection, organ transplantation, sex workers, drug abuser, tattoo, piercing, blood donation, history of scaling or dental filling, HCV family history and so on. As for China, the awareness of HCV infection is much lower than HBV because the occult of HCV infection, also because governments as well as medical authorities didn't input enough resources to disease education. Up to now, the national HCV elimination in China is daunting because of barriers in HCV awareness/link to care, and lack of well-established strategies. On the contrary, HBV infection has been widely known and educated to general population. As an add-on benefit, it might be relatively easier to conduct HCV screening test among those HBsAg-positive population. HCV elimination in high-risk subgroups from the basis in HBV population can be achieved with greater possibility and such model could be further shared to health care societies.
Biologic Basis of Liver Cancer From Chronic Hepatitis B
Hepatocellular CarcinomaHepatitis B1 moreThe focus of the study is to identify viral factors and host immune responses that differentiate HBV-related HCC patients from HBV patients who have not progressed to HCC. To that end, the investigators will compare gene expression levels between HCC patients and non-HCC patients categorized into high and low risk profiles. The investigators will perform ANOVA to compare three groups (HCC, high risk, low risk). Multiple comparison corrections will be performed using Benjamini and Hochberg False Discovery Rate (FDR) with a 90% confidence that the discovery lists will contain no more than 5% false positives (FDR<0.05) (PMID: 12584122, 11682119). A p-value <0.05 is considered statistically significant using this multiple comparison correction approach. Post-hoc Student-Newman-Keuls or Tukey tests will be used following ANOVA for comparisons of HCC patients with high risk and low risk. If data are not normally distributed when log-transformed, then Kruskall-Wallis tests will be used. ANCOVA will be used to adjust for the effects of covariates, such as age, gender, and HBV genotype (B or C). Further, the investigators often use an additional 2-fold change criterion for significance because the investigators consider a fold change of this magnitude to be biologically significant. Hierarchical clustering analyses and principal component analyses will be used to visualize how well the genes separate the groups, or to discover new subgroups. For the analysis of SNVs, the exact binomial test will be performed and p-values will be adjusted by the Benjamini-Hochberg correction.
Maternal Screening and Antiviral Therapy in Pregnant Women to Reduce Mother-to-infant Transmission...
Hepatitis B Virus InfectionTo investigate the efficacy of using antiviral therapy in third trimester of pregnancy to reduce mother-to-infant HBV transmission, and to access the safety of such treatment for mothers and infants.
IL-35+Breg/Il-35 Effect on T Cell Immune in Patients With CHB
Chronic Hepatitis bThe investigators observed the level of IL-35 secreting B regulatory (IL-35+Bregs) cells in peripheral blood cells in patients with chronic hepatitis B, and analysed the relationship between the IL-35+Bregs level and disease stage, and Th1 and Th2 cells level.
Characterisation of Human B Cell Maturation in Response to Vaccination
Hepatitis BThis study is an exploratory single site sample collection study at St Mary's hospital campus, Imperial College London. Sixteen participants scheduled to receive routine immunizations for Td/IPV (group 1) and HBsAg (group 2) will be recruited overall. Eights participants will be allocated to group 1 and eights participants to group 2 depending on their immunisation regime.
Spirulina (FEM-102) Supplement to Chronic Hepatitis B Patients
Chronic Hepatitis bHepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), listed among lung and breast cancers as the top-ten cancer in 2016 Taiwan, is the second most prevalent cancer, just one place below colon cancer. Due to mass hepatitis B vaccination and the screening and therapeutic plan against hepatitis B and C viruses (HBV and HCV, respectively), the incidence of liver cancer drops significantly, however, still around twenty out of per hundred thousand population die from liver cancer each year. For patients suffering HBV and HCV, the prevention of HCC is a crucial health issue.
Immunogenicity of the Hepatitis B Vaccine
Vaccine Response ImpairedHepatitis B1 moreMore than five decades have passed since the identification of the etiologic agent of hepatitis B and yet this infection is a challenge for public health worldwide. The development and availability of the first hepatitis B vaccines, still in the 1980s, was a milestone for the prevention of the hepatitis B virus, and currently known as the gold standard strategy for the elimination of this infectious disease. In several countries, the introduction of the immunobiological occurred gradually, by age groups and risk groups, and in general, started with newborns and children. This universal immunization strategy has contributed to reducing the incidence and changing the epidemiological profile of HBV worldwide. At the beginning of the 21st century, it was already possible to shift the epidemiological curve of the infection to parasitize with 50 years or more. On the other hand, despite vaccination against hepatitis B being the most assertive tool for the prevention of HBV, the low performance of the vaccine in older groups remains a challenge for public health and the object of this study. To our knowledge, there are no data showing the efficacy of doses of enhanced hepatitis B vaccines for older adults, and the purpose of this study is to investigate and compare the immunogenicity of the hepatitis B vaccine in adult adults aged 50 years and over, using conventional doses (20μg) versus (vs) booster doses.
Open Label Study of Pharmacokinetics and Safety of Dose of Adefovir Dipivoxil in Children and Adolescents...
Hepatitis BOpen-label study of the pharmacokinetics of adefovir dipivoxil in children and adolescents infected with chronic hepatitis B.
Observational Study of Immune Response to Hepatitis B Childhood Booster
HealthyThe UK immunisation guidelines recommend that children immunised with an accelerated course of hepatitis B vaccine (i.e. vaccination at 0, 1, 2 and 12 months) receive an additional booster dose of vaccine in later childhood (usually at 3 1/2 years of age). The primary objective of this study is to to assess what proportion of these children have 'protective' concentrations (10mIU/ml) of hepatitis B specific antibodies before and after the booster dose of hepatitis B vaccine.