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Hepatitis A clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Hepatitis A.

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NCT ID: NCT02982993 Completed - Clinical trials for Hepatitis C Infection

Hepatitis C Infection in World Trade Center Responders

Start date: December 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study provides Hepatitis C virus screening to the members of the World Trade Center Health Program followed at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai born during 1945-1965, and linkage to care for those found infected. The study will also determine if exposure to human remains, blood and/or bodily fluids during the World Trade Center Health Program activities are associated with Hepatitis C virus infection. These findings would be relevant to the larger United States population, especially to persons born during 1945-1965 who are at high risk of Hepatitis C virus infection.

NCT ID: NCT02982837 Recruiting - Hepatitis B Clinical Trials

To Study the Effect of Adding on Pegylated Interferon (PEG-INF) Therapy for Patients Diagnosed With Chronic Hepatitis B

RC14/055
Start date: March 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

To assess whether PEG-INF (Peglyated - interferon) Add-on therapy in patients of CHB who have achieved a maintained viral suppression (HBV DNA PCR( polymerase chain reaction) <200 for last 3-6 month) with NA's can result in increased rate of HBV infection eradication (HbsAg is undetectable by serological blood testing with or without seroconversion to HBs antibody).

NCT ID: NCT02981602 Completed - Hepatitis B Clinical Trials

Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics and Antiviral Activity of IONIS-HBVRx in Treatment-Naïve Patients With Chronic HBV Infection

Start date: February 24, 2017
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

To examine the safety and tolerability of IONIS-HBVRx administration to treatment-naive patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infection

NCT ID: NCT02979613 Completed - Chronic Hepatitis B Clinical Trials

Study to Evaluate Efficacy and Safety of Switching From TDF to TAF in Adults With Chronic Hepatitis B Who Are Virologically Suppressed

Start date: December 29, 2016
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The primary objectives of this study are to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of switching to tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) versus continuing tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) in virologically suppressed adults with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection.

NCT ID: NCT02973646 Recruiting - Chronic Hepatitis b Clinical Trials

Peginterferon Alfa-2b Treatment in HBeAg(+) Chronic Hepatitis b Patients Based on Interferon Gene Mutation and Receptor Detection

Start date: January 2016
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The study is to observe the anti-HBV therapeutic effects of peginterferon alfa-2b in chronic hepatitis b patients with e antigen positive based on the detection of interferon gene mutation (IFNA2 p.Ala120Thr) and interferon receptor (IFNAR2) detection.

NCT ID: NCT02972723 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Hepatitis C Infection

Metformin Therapy in HCV Infection

Start date: March 2011
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Hepatitis C virus infection (HCV) is a major cause of cirrhosis and death from liver disease worldwide. Current therapy for HCV with interferon based therapies results in cure rates of around 5055% which leaves a significant number of patients without effective therapy. HCV induces (can bring on) insulin resistance and insulin resistance is a factor known to reduce the response to antiHCV therapy. This finding stimulated initial studies looking at agents that may reduce insulin resistance as additional therapy in HCV infection. A study using metformin in addition to interferon and ribavirin showed a nonsignificant increase in cure rates (53% vs. 42%), but this was limited to patients with type 1 infection AND demonstrable insulin resistance. The assumption was made that the potential effect of metformin was likely to be on insulin resistance and thus by modulating this enhances response. The investigators (Prof M Harris, University of Leeds) have data (currently unpublished)suggesting that metformin may have an antiviral effect independent of its effect on insulin resistance, thus raising the possibility that metformin may have a direct antiviral effect in vivo. Given that the development of specific antiHCV agents which target viral proteins such as its polymerase and protease are in trial development but have so far proved either highly toxic or are likely to have a huge cost there is considerable rationale for looking at alternative potential antiHCV agents and in this context metformin is cheap, readily available and has an excellent safety profile. This pilot study therefore addresses the question "Does metformin therapy result in a significant drop in HCV viral load in chronically infected patients?"

NCT ID: NCT02971488 Completed - HIV Clinical Trials

The Impact on Linkage-to-care of an Alternative Hepatitis C Screening Method in PWID

Start date: January 15, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Screening, diagnosis and treatment of HCV in PWID, should be part of a harm reduction strategy. Treatment of HCV infected PWID should be delivered in a multidisciplinary care setting with services to reduce the risk of reinfection and for management of the common social and psychiatric comorbidities in this population. More frequent diagnosis, new methods that prevent loss of tracking, and access to antiviral treatment are all strategies that must be implemented jointly if the prevalence of HCV infection in our setting is to be reduced.

NCT ID: NCT02971306 Recruiting - Alcoholic Hepatitis Clinical Trials

G-CSF Plus NAC In Severe Alcoholic Hepatitis

Start date: July 2014
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Alcoholic hepatitis is related to very high mortality rate. About 40% of the patients are died within first 6 months after the detection of the clinical syndrome. Therefore, it is very essential for proper diagnosis and early treatment. In response to acute or chronic liver damage, bone marrow derived stem cells can spontaneously populate liver and differentiate into hepatic cells. Animal and human studies suggested that injured hepatocyte may be replaced by pluripotent bone marrow cells. However, this hepatocyte repopulation is highly dependent on varieties of liver injury and therapeutic conditions6. The studies has suggested Granulocyte-colony stimulating factors (G-CSF) can regenerate hepatocyte by fusing with hematopoietic cells, thereby enhancing the liver histology and survival rate. G-CSF is a cytokine capable to regulate a number of functions in neutrophils. In three recent studies mobilization of bone marrow stem cells induced by G-CSF was observed in patients with alcoholic hepatitis. In two of this studies there was a survival benefit with the use of G-CSF. Alcoholism leads to decrease in endogenous antioxidant potential. Alcoholic liver disease (ALD) patients show low endogenous antioxidants. Chronic ethanol consumption cause selective deficiency in the availability of reduced glutathione (GSH) in mitochondria has been reported. This is due to impaired functioning of GSH transporter from cytosol to mitochondrial matrix. The effect on glutathione replenishing potential by N-acetyl cysteine (NAC) can be used to reduce oxidative stress, which also has excellent safety profile. Therefore, NAC can be used for severe alcoholic hepatitis treatment due to its therapeutic potential factor. NAC also inhibit apoptosis and pro-inflammatory cytokine production. In a study high doses of intravenous N-acetyl cysteine therapy for 14 days conferred neither survival benefits nor early biological improvement in severe alcoholic hepatitis patients with adequate nutritional support.However, these results must be viewed with caution, since the study suffered from a lack of power. In a recent study, NAC and corticosteroids combination therapy benefits among patients with severe acute alcoholic hepatitis in 1 month survival, although the final outcome at 6 month survival was not improved. There are no studies on the use of combination therapy of NAC plus G-CSF in patient with severe alcoholic hepatitis. Therefore we plan to study the safety and efficacy of combination therapy of G-CSF and NAC in the patients with alcoholic hepatitis.

NCT ID: NCT02971033 Terminated - Chronic Hepatitis C Clinical Trials

Ezetimibe as a Safe and Efficacious Treatment for Chronic Hepatitis C

Start date: April 16, 2018
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

To address the need for more affordable hepatitis C virus (HCV) antivirals with high barriers to viral resistance and strategies to shorten the current treatment duration, the goal is to develop affordable therapeutic regimens to prevent HCV entry/spread and test the efficacy of those inhibitors for treating HCV infection. The investigators recently discovered that a major cholesterol uptake receptor is required for HCV entry into hepatocytes and that there is already an FDA-approved drug that inhibits cholesterol uptake by this receptor. Importantly the same drug also potently blocks HCV entry in human liver cells both in cell culture and in a small animal model. Further, looking back at people who were previously treated for HCV infection, the investigators found treatment response to be better (i.e. larger viral log reduction) in patients who happened to be taking ezetimibe (EZE). Hence, the objective of this study is to assess whether the FDA-approved drug (ezetimibe) is useful for the treatment of chronic HCV. The investigators predict that when administered as monotherapy ezetimibe will reduce HCV viremia perhaps allowing for viral clearance and that when included in combination treatment regimens that EZE will increase HCV decline resulting in faster viral clearance (i.e. shorter/cheaper direct-acting antiviral [DAA] therapy). To test these hypotheses, the investigators will execute the following aims: (1) Assess the efficacy of EZE monotherapy in chronically HCV infected and predict time to cure; (2) Assess the efficacy of EZE as an adjunct therapy in chronically HCV infected patients undergoing currently approved HCV DAA treatment.

NCT ID: NCT02969668 Completed - Clinical trials for Hepatitis C, Chronic

Interferon-free Antiviral Treatment of Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infection Among Opioid-substituted Patients

INFO
Start date: March 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The primary objective of study will be to evaluate the effectiveness of interferon-free direct acting antivirals (IFN-free DAAs) in the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) among patients in opioid-substitution treatment (OST). We hypothesize that rates of sustained virological response will be comparable to non-OST populations. Secondary objectives include the evaluation of safety data, patients' adherence and patient reported outcome measures like functioning (disability), satisfaction with the treatment, health status, general health perceptions and health-related quality of life.