View clinical trials related to Hepatitis C, Chronic.
Filter by:The objective of the study is to evaluate the costs associated with peginterferon alfa-2b (PegIntron) plus ribavirin (Rebetol) treatment for chronic hepatitis C in the Czech Republic. Only costs associated with rescue medication, concomitant therapy, disease monitoring, and medical intervention costs recognized by the treating institution as treatment-related expenses will be included in the analysis. The study will also evaluate the correlation between hepatitis C virus (HCV) therapy-related costs with ribavirin dosing and participant history.
The role of the dendritic cells, the most potent antigen presenting cells, in the establishment of chronic hepatitis C is not established. The study aims to define whether the dendritic cells are affected by the hepatitis C virus and whether that bears an impact on the antiviral immune response they generate. The hypothesis is explored by investigating a group of patients prior to and after the initiation of standard treatment for hepatitis C with pegylated Interferon and Ribavirin.
The primary purpose of this study is to assess the change in HCV RNA during dosing with BMS-650032 and during the follow-up period in subjects with chronic hepatitis C infection
Up to 120 patients with chronic hepatitis C will be enrolled in a study of viral kinetics and liver gene expression before and during combination therapy with peginterferon and ribavirin. Adult patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection who have compensated liver disease and have not received interferon in the past will be randomized into one of four groups. Groups A and C will undergo liver biopsy before starting peginterferon therapy and Groups B and D will undergo biopsy 6 hours after the initial dose of peginterferon. Furthermore, Groups C and D will receive a run-in period of 4 weeks of ribavirin therapy before starting peginterferon. All patients will receive the standard recommended doses of peginterferon alfa 2a (180 mcg sc weekly) and ribavirin (1000 or 1200 mg daily for genotypes 1, 4-6 and 800 mg daily for genotype 2 and 3) for up to 48 weeks (24 weeks for genotype 2 and 3). All patients in Groups C and D, irrespective of genotype, will be pretreated with ribavirin at a dose of 1000 or 1200 mg, depending on patient body-weight. After the initial peginterferon injection, patients will have blood taken and symptoms recorded at 6, 24, 48, 72 hours and weekly thereafter for four weeks to assess viral kinetic response. Liver biopsy tissue taken before or 6 hours after the initial dose of peginterferon will be assessed by standard light microscopy and also subjected to RNA extraction and microarray analysis of mRNA expression. Patients will be monitored carefully during therapy and tested regularly for HCV RNA levels. Therapy will be given for 48 weeks, but will be discontinued early for patients with genotype 1 infection if HCV RNA levels do not decline by at least 2 log IU/ml by week 12 (lack of an early virological response) or do not decline to undetectable levels by week 24 (lack of HCV RNA clearance). Patients with other genotypes with be treated for a full course of therapy regardless of early responses. After completing therapy, patients will be followed at 4 to 8 week intervals and undergo repeat medical evaluation with liver biopsy 24 weeks after stopping therapy. The primary clinical criterion for success of therapy is a sustained virological response, as marked by the absence of HCV RNA from serum at least 24 weeks after stopping. The focus of this study, however, will be on viral kinetics comparing patients who were pretreated with ribavirin (Groups C and D) to those who were not (Groups A and B) as well as on gene expression studies assessing the effects of peginterferon on intrahepatic mRNA profiles by comparing Group A and B and the effects of ribavirin by comparing Group A to Group C and Group B to Group D. Results will also be compared between different HCV genotypes. These studies are aimed at assessing the mechanisms of action of peginterferon and ribavirin against HCV and evaluating the basis for the lack of virologic response to combination therapy.
To determine the relapse rate at 24 weeks follow up in Hepatitis C Virus Genotype 1 Low Viral Load (HCV LVL G1) patients treated for 24 weeks with Peg Intron and Rebetol who are Hepatitis C Virus-Ribonucleic Acid (HCV-RNA) negative at treatment week 4 and week 24. To determine the proportion of patients (%) with sustained virological response at 24 weeks post follow up treatment.
The objective of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness of PegIntron plus Rebetol combination in treating patients with chronic hepatitis C in a primary care setting. Patients received no antiviral therapy prior to the current study. Only patients infected with Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) genotype 1, 4, 5, or 6 will be enrolled in the study. The study will also explore the influence of liver fibrosis stage on the chances of achieving a sustained virologic response.
This study involves treatment with boceprevir or placebo in combination with pegylated interferon alfa-2b (PegIntron, PEG2b) + Ribavirin (RBV) (weight-based dosing [WBD]) in adult subjects with chronic hepatitis C (CHC) genotype 1 who demonstrated interferon responsiveness (a decrease in hepatitis C virus RNA [HCV-RNA] viral load >=2 log10 by Week 12 or undetectable HCV-RNA at end of treatment) but who failed to achieve sustained virologic response (SVR) on prior treatment with any combination therapy of peginterferon alpha and RBV. This trial includes three arms, one control arm (PEG2b + RBV for 48 weeks) and two experimental arms (PEG2b + RBV + boceprevir). One of the experimental arms, Arm 3, consists of treatment with all three drugs for 44 weeks after the lead-in. The other experimental arm, Arm 2, consists of all three drugs for 32 weeks after the lead-in. Participants in Arm 2 who were undetectable for HCV-RNA at Treatment Week 8 will complete treatment at that point. Those who were not undetectable for HCV-RNA at Treatment Week 8 will receive an additional 12 weeks of PEG2b + RBV + boceprevir placebo. It is hypothesized that the addition of a third active anti-HCV drug may lead to more rapid viral response than therapy with two drugs, and therefore, the addition of boceprevir to PEG2b plus RBV therapy after a 4-week lead-in period may allow for both increased rates of SVR and shorter treatment durations (in some populations) than treatment with peginterferon plus RBV alone.
Chronic hepatitis C (CHC) is among the commonest chronic infectious disease in Australia with >200,000 exposed persons. Amongst non-infectious chronic conditions- Type 2 diabetes, obesity and heart disease are extremely common. This study will examine the relationship between insulin resistance, fat deposition in the liver, muscle and abdomen, and liver injury due to CHC
In February 2002, a French Consensus Conference on the management of patients with chronic hepatitis C in France was organized. The jury issued several recommendations on pegylated alpha interferon/ribavirin treatment strategy. Three years after these recommendations, it is of interest to understand the evolution of hepatitis C management in France in real clinical practice. This observational study will permit the identification of patients who are treated and will provide information on the use of PegIntron/ Ribavirin.
This study involves treatment with boceprevir or placebo in combination with PegIntron (PEG) + Ribavirin (RBV) (weight-based dosing [WBD]) in previously untreated adult participants with chronic hepatitis C (CHC) genotype 1. It is hypothesized that the addition of a third active anti- Hepatitis C Virus (anti-HCV) drug may lead to more rapid viral response than therapy with two drugs, and therefore, the addition of boceprevir to PegIntron plus ribavirin therapy after a 4-week lead-in period may allow for both increased rates of sustained virologic response (SVR) and shorter treatment durations (in some populations) than treatment with PegIntron plus ribavirin alone. The study includes two separate cohorts, Cohort I (White participants) and Cohort II (Black participants). Participants from each cohort are assigned (randomized) to one of three study arms, all of which have a 4-week lead-in period with (PEG + RBV).