Hepatitis B Infection Clinical Trial
— REVERT-BOfficial title:
A Phase III, Randomized, 2x2 Factorial Trial to Assess the Efficacy of Antiviral Therapy in Women and Infants in Reducing Vertical Transmission of Hepatitis B in Africa
Hepatitis B virus is an infection that can be easily transmitted from women to newborns at the time of delivery. Our objective is to identify novel options that are effective and safe in preventing perinatal transmission of hepatitis B in Africa. The REVERT-B study (Reducing Vertical Transmission of Hepatitis B in Africa) is a clinical trial designed to test a new strategy of using antiviral medication in high-risk pregnant women and newborns to reduce the risk of hepatitis B transmission. The study will measure efficacy, safety, tolerability and adherence to medication.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 450 |
Est. completion date | December 31, 2025 |
Est. primary completion date | December 31, 2025 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 16 Years to 50 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - prenatal clinic patient, - age =16 years, - 14-32 weeks gestational age according to clinic dating based on LMP or ultrasound, - active hepatitis B with risk of vertical transmission (HBsAg+ AND HBeAg+ or HBV DNA >1000 IU/ML), - plan to receive follow up care and deliver at study facility, - capable of providing informed consent. Exclusion Criteria: - HIV positive (according to HIV antibody testing performed at the initial prenatal visit) - known liver cirrhosis or end-stage liver disease, - elevated liver enzymes (ALT >5x upper limit of normal), - elevated serum creatinine (>1.4 mg/dl) - currently taking tenofovir medication - allergy or intolerance to tenofovir study medication, - known fetal anomaly in the current pregnancy, - clinical illness requiring hospitalization at the time of enrollment - evidence of early labor at the time of enrollment. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | University of Alabama at Birmingham | Birmingham | Alabama |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Alabama at Birmingham | Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Vertical Transmission of hepatitis B Infection | The proportion of infants with Hepatitis B surface antigen positivity (SAg+) | 6-9 months of age | |
Primary | Virologic Suppression | The proportion of women with a suppressed HBV DNA viral load (<10 IU/mL). | at delivery | |
Secondary | In utero HBV infection | HBV infection (SAg+, PCR positive) | at birth | |
Secondary | Maternal Adherence to TDF | HPLC measurement of serum | 8 weeks after starting medication | |
Secondary | Maternal Adherence to TDF | HPLC measurement of serum | at delivery | |
Secondary | Infant Adherence to 3TC | HPLC measurement of serum | 12 weeks after starting 3TC | |
Secondary | Infant Adherence to 3TC | HPLC measurement of serum | 24 weeks after starting 3TC | |
Secondary | Hepatitis B Flare | Increase in ALT (>2x ULN) after stopping TDF at delivery | 12 weeks after delivery | |
Secondary | Hepatitis B Flare | Increase in ALT (>2x ULN) after stopping TDF at delivery | 24 weeks after delivery | |
Secondary | Preterm delivery | Delivery <37 weeks gestational age | assessed at delivery | |
Secondary | Composite Adverse Birth Outcomes | PTD, SAB, IUFD, neonatal death | during pregnancy or up to 28 days after delivery | |
Secondary | Incident HIV infection during pregnancy | Maternal HIV infection with seroconversion to positive test | at delivery | |
Secondary | Retention in Prenatal Care | at least 4 ANC visits after 28 weeks GA | assessed at time of delivery |
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