View clinical trials related to Hepatitis A.
Filter by:The purpose of the study is to demonstrate the noninferiority of Algeron in combination with ribavirin compared to PegIntron in combination with ribavirin in treatment of chronic hepatitis C in Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 infected patients
The purpose of this study is to determine whether treatment with Daclatasvir/Asunaprevir/BMS-791325, with or without ribavirin, for 8, 6, or 4 weeks is feasible for the treatment of genotype 1a chronic hepatitis C in patients without cirrhosis.
A randomized, Open label, Single center, Prospective study to compare efficacy and safety of Therapeutic Vaccination with Intensified schedule plus Pegylated Interferon dual Therapy on Seroclearance of Hepatitis B virus Surface Antigen in Patients with Complete Virological Response Induced by Entecavir
This study will explore the relationship of different DEB025 doses in combination with RBV to pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic (i.e. viral load reduction) and safety profiles in chronic hepatitis C GT 2 and 3 patients who have previously failed interferon therapy or are intolerant or unable to take interferon
This study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of combination treatment with grazoprevir (MK-5172) + elbasvir (MK-8742) for cirrhotic and non-cirrhotic participants with chronic Genotype 1 (GT1) hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and chronic kidney disease (CKD). The primary study hypothesis is that the proportion of HCV GT1-infected CKD participants within the Immediate Treatment and Intensive Pharmacokinetics (PK) groups achieving a sustained viral response 12 weeks after the end of all study treatment (SVR12) will be >45%.
This is a 3-part study of Ruzasvir (MK-8408) for participants with hepatitis C infection. Successive participants will be enrolled as dose levels are evaluated to find the maximum safe and well tolerated dose of Ruzasvir. Part I will be for participants with hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 3 (GT3) and will run first: Part II will be for participants with HCV genotype 1a (GT1a), and Part III will be for participants with HCV genotype 2b (GT2b). Parts II and III may run concurrently. The primary study hypothesis is that a safe and tolerable dose of Ruzasvir that reduces viral load will be found to support further clinical investigation.
Purpose: To improve the diagnosis and assessment of severity of acute alcoholic hepatitis Participants: Patients admitted to one of ten centers with acute alcoholic hepatitis Procedures (methods): Consecutive patients admitted with acute alcoholic hepatitis will be enrolled in an NIH U01 study of acute alcoholic hepatitis where liver tissue, blood and stool will be collected to discover and validate factors associated with diagnosis, severity of disease and survival.
It is estimated that 350-400 million people have chronic infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) all over the world. In china, 93 million individuals suffer from this chronic condition. Currently, seven medications are approved for the treatment of hepatitis B: two formulations of interferon and four nucleos(t)ide analogues. The Chinese population has one of the longer average life spans, and the size of the aged population has been increasing rapidly. As a result, the prevalence of elderly patients with HBV has increased, and the potential for development of cirrhosis or hepatocellular carcinoma in such patients is real. Hence, treatment of elderly patients with HBV is an important issue. However, ADV or ETV has become first choice due to the more side effect of INF and the resistant of LAM and LdT. But treatment outcomes with ADV and ETV in elderly are not known yet. In this study, we will evaluate and compare the efficacy and tolerability of ADV and ETV between younger and older patients with HBV. The aims of the present study are (1)to assess the benefits of ADV or ETV therapy for elderly patients with chronic hepatitis B, and (2)to determine differences in the emergence rate of side effect.
This non-interventional clinical study will be conducted to prospectively collect serial plasma and serum samples from treatment naïve subjects with chronic HCV infection who are initiating sofosbuvir-based therapy. These samples will be used to estimate clinical utility endpoints for the Aptima HCV Quant Dx assay which is used an aid in the management of HCV-infected patients undergoing HCV antiviral therapy.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and antiviral effect of ABT-450/r and ABT-530 coadministered with and without Ribavirin in adults with genotype 3 HCV infection.