View clinical trials related to Hepatitis B.
Filter by:Single arm, prospective open-label study of a care model consisting of two components: Component I aims to achieve high coverage of interventions to prevent maternal-to-child transmission of hepatitis B virus: antenatal tenofovir, and timely newborn administration of hepatitis B birth dose vaccine and hepatitis B immune globulin; Component II aims to achieve high coverage of screening, vaccination, and anti-viral therapy for HBV among household members of women with chronic HBV infection.
Subjects can be classified into two groups, Group 1 include non-cirrhotic patients, Group 2 include cirrhotic patients. All the patients will be received prophylactically TAF for 4 weeks before using SOF/VEL once daily for 12 weeks. In total, Group 1 patients will be discontinued TAF once daily therapy at the end of week 28 if no HBV reactivation occurs during treatment , Group 2 patients will be received TAF once daily for 64 weeks. In this study, after week 64, Group 2 patients will continue NUC treatment but pay by themselves. For those who is GT3 cirrhosis patients, RBV added simultaneously with SOF/VEL for 12 weeks. For patients weighing < 75 kg, the dose is 500 mg twice; for patients weighing ≥ 75 kg, the dose is 600 mg twice.
This prospective cohort study aims to provide the evidence-based clinical guide to help decide the revaccination doses of hepatitis B vaccine that the high-risk young adults without hepatitis B seroprotective antibodies (anti-HBs titer<10 mIU/mL) need to take.
A high number of people are infected by viral hepatitises B and C without knowing it, especially vulnerable population such as the ones who come in consultation in continuous health care access center (Permanence d'accès aux soins, PASS). Now that these infections can be rapidly treated, it is essential to diagnose them the quickest possible. The Identification and Diagnostic Orientation Test (Test de repérage et d'orientation diagnostique, TROD) technique is a rapid tool allowing to screen for hepatitis B and C by a simple capillary sample. The study aims to evaluate the accptability of a systematic screening using TROD for hepatitis B and C in adults in a PASS consultation in Montpellier. We also want to estimate the prevalence of theses infections in the population, to describe the HBV and HCV care cascades, to evaluate the acceptability of vaccinal catch-up for HBV, and to describe people with hepatits.
This is a long-term follow-up study to assess durability of efficacy, as measured by SVR, in participants who have received prior treatment with GSK3228836 and achieved a complete or partial response. No further treatment with GSK3228836 will be administered in this study.
The REACH-B study establishes an observational cohort study of people living with chronic hepatitis B from a national network, including a diverse range of services, to characterise and monitor hepatitis B linkage to care and treatment requirements amongst this population.
This is a retrospective-prospective longitudinal cohort study, with analyses performed before and after introduction of the pathway, and comparisons made to unexposed controls. We will launch a protocol-driven management for CHB patients, and provide the appropriate assessment tools (transient elastography, HBV DNA assay) to general outpatient clinics (GOPC) in Hong Kong. Patients who fulfil treatment criteria will be referred to specialist outpatient clinics (SOPC) in a fast-track manner. We will also evaluate the linkage-to-care rate 3 years before the launch of this care pathway retrospectively.
The objective of this protocol is the collection and testing of clinical samples to determine the clinical performance of the Access HBV serological marker assays on the DxI 9000 Access Immunoassay Analyzer. The study will involve a multicenter, prospective and retrospective collection of samples, and testing of samples with the investigational Hepatitis B Virus assays as required per the European Union Common Technical Specification. All samples collected will be anonymized or pseudo-anonymised, leftover, remnant samples. Pseudo-anonymised collection of samples will require documented patient consent (oral or written).
This is a multicenter, prospective, real-world study, recruiting patients with chronic hepatitis B under anti-viral treatment. The recruited participants will receive peginterferon alpha based regimen or nucleos(t)ide alone. The primary objective of this study is to compare the long-term outcomes (including hepatocellular carcinoma, decompensated cirrhosis, etc)of different anti-viral therapies. The secondary objective of this study is to compare the serological response rates of different anti-viral therapies, evaluate the predictive value of HBV-related laboratory testings and describe the kinetics of them results during antiviral treatment. The follow-up time course of this study will be 5 years.
The aim of this study is to compare the BW and metabolic profiles of CHB patient before and after shifting to TAF therapy. In this study, investigators will enroll 100 entecavir and 100 TDF treated CHB patients who will switch to TAF and then follow for one year. Demographic, liver function tests, sugar profiles, lipid profiles, ASCVD risk score, body weight, body weight, body height, and waist circumference will be checked and recorded periodically. Investigators anticipated that body weight will change significantly after switching to TAF in both entecavir and TDF group and may associated with increased risk of cardiovascular risk.