View clinical trials related to Hepatitis A.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to evaluate the prevalence of hepatitis B in Vallés Occidental. Also, describe the stage of the disease, and whether if they are under medical treatment or not.
This study aims to assess the frequency and severity of adverse events during Hepatitis C therapy with or without first generation protease inhibitors.
The aim of this study is to characterize neutrophil function in patients undergoing chronic hepatitis C triple therapy with protease inhibitors in comparison to dual therapy with peginterferon and ribavirin and with interferon free treatment regimen to thereby elucidate the possible mechanisms of protease-inhibitor associated infections.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether the HBAI20 vaccine is safe and more immunogenic than the HBVaxPro-10µg in people who have never been vaccinated with a hepatitis B vaccine and in people who have been vaccinated 6 times with hepatitis B vaccine but do not have a protective anti hepatitis B antibody titer.
This post-marketing surveillance (PMS) study for Sovaldi® tablets (sofosbuvir, SOF) administered in combination with Copegus® tablets (ribavirin, COPE) will evaluate the safety and efficacy of SOF administered in combination with ribavirin under real world use in Japan. Among adult patients with chronic genotype 2 hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and treated with SOF+ribavirin in routine clinical use, the primary objective of this study is to evaluate the incidence of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) under real world settings.
Retrospective/Prospective, open-label study using sofosbuvir based DAA therapy to treat HIV/HCV coinfected pre or post liver transplant participants
This is an open-label, single arm cohort study to see efficacy and safety of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) in naïve chronic hepatitis B, retrospectively and prospectively both.
Using European data from patients included in the Named Patient Program (NPP) and from the early post-marketing authorization period, the present study aims to describe patient characteristics and to describe the effectiveness of Daclatasvir (DCV)-based regimens in Europe. This will be a retrospective cohort study of patients who received treatment with a DCV-based regimen in the following context: - Patients enrolled within the European NPP in one of the following countries Austria, Denmark, Italy, Sweden, Spain, Switzerland, United Kingdom; or - In those countries where DCV is commercially available (ie, Sweden, Germany, United Kingdom), patients who received DCV during the early post-marketing authorization period The results of this study will contribute to a better understanding of effectiveness of DCV-based regimens in a population that differs from population in the clinical trials, and therefore will provide additional valuable information to inform clinical practice. This study intends to estimate primarily the effectiveness of DCV-based regimens as measured by the sustained virologic response at post treatment follow-up visit week 12 (SVR12). As well as estimate the effectiveness of DCV-based regimens as measured by SVR12 after the end of Hepatitis C virus (HCV). This study intends also to describe as secondary objectives the characteristics (ie, demographic and clinical characteristics and treatment patterns of patients starting a new DCV-based regimens) of patients receiving DCV as well as the effectiveness of DCV-based regimens as measured by: - On-treatment virological response at post treatment follow-up visit Week 4; and - Virological response at the end of treatment (EOT); and - The sustained viral response at post treatment follow-up visit Week 4 (SVR4) and post treatment follow-up visit Week 24 (SVR24); and - The occurrence of virological failure (on-treatment and relapse). An exploratory objective will be to assess the concordance between SVR4 and SVR12 among the overall population treated with DCV.
The purpose of the study is to investigate how the liver is affected with regard to inflammation and fibrosis during Sofosbuvir based treatment regimes of chronic hepatitis C. In order to examine how the liver heals, we want to use blood samples to check for the occurrence of special liver inflammation cells (CD163 and CD206). To assess to which extent fibrosis disappear during treatment, we want to examine the liver with FibroScan (a type of ultrasound examination) and also preferably with extraction of a small tissue sample. We want to examine how the liver function as inflammation and scar tissue decrease, especially concerning the liver's ability to produce proteins. Furthermore, we want to examine with a gastroscopy, if the circulation of blood in the liver is improved after successful treatment with the expected result that potential varicose veins in the esophagus vanish.
Investigation of the effects of the new Abbvie direct acting anti-viral (DAA) treatment of chronic viral hepatitis C infection on the macrophage specific activation marker soluble CD163, portal hypertension determined by the hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG), and metabolic liver function determined by the galactose elimination capacity (GEC) test and the functional hepatic nitrogen clearance (FHNC).