View clinical trials related to Hepatitis C.
Filter by:This study aims to evaluate the efficacy, safety and feasibility of four weeks of sofosbuvir plus glecaprevir-pibrentasvir, followed by immediate retreatment of virological relapse with glecepravir-pibrentasvir for 12 weeks, in treatment-naïve participants with chronic HCV infection and early liver disease (F0-F2).
An observational double-blind cohort study that examined the association between HCV viral hepatitis, blood sugar level and systolic blood pressure in the Egyptian population
The purpose of this study was to confirm that combination of narlaprevir (NVR) and ritonavir (RTV) used as a metabolic inhibitor with pegylated interferon (PEG-INF) and ribavirin (RBV) leads to a superior Sustained Virological Response (SVR) rate compared to treatment with pegylated interferon and ribavirin in treatment-naïve and treatment failure patient populations.
The purpose of this study is to learn more about what psychological and social factors affect people in how they take their hepatitis C medications.
This is an interventional, non-randomized, controlled prospective study to treat HCV in mono-infected and HIV co-infected individuals and compare cardiovascular risk outcomes to HIV mono-infected controls. This pilot study will demonstrate whether functional cure of HCV reduces myocardial injury and risk of cardiovascular disease.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the steady-state pharmacokinetics (PK) and confirm the age-appropriate dose of sofosbuvir/velpatasvir/voxilaprevir (SOF/VEL/VOX) fixed-dose combination (FDC) in pediatric participants with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection.
This is an open-label, pilot trial to test the safety and efficacy of transplantation of livers from Hepatitis C seropositive non-viremic (HCV Ab+/NAT-) and HCV seropositive viremic (HCV Ab+/NAT+) donors to HCV seronegative recipients on the liver transplant waitlist. Treatment and prophylaxis will be administered, using a transmission-triggered approach for the first scenario (HCV Ab+/NAT- donors, arm 1) and a prophylaxis approach for the later scenario (HCV Ab+/NAT+ donors, arm 2).
This is a single arm multicenter pilot study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of treatment with sofosbuvir (SOF)/velpatasvir (VEL) fix dose combination (FDC) in patients with acute hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection.
Elbasvir/grazoprevir (Zepatier®) is a once-daily tablet for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) GT1a, 1b or 4 infection containing the NS5A inhibitor elbasvir (ELB) 50 mg and the NS3/4A protease inhibitor grazoprevir (GZR) 100 mg. For patients with swallowing difficulties, administration of whole tablets can be problematic. In addition, HCV patients that are hospitalized (at intensive care units) due to severe illness (co-infections/ liver failure) might not be able to swallow medication. Therefore it is useful to know whether it is possible to administer ELB/GZR through a different route, like a feeding tube. In daily practice, information about the safety and efficacy of crushed tablets is lacking which might result in noncompliance, interruption or discontinuation of expensive HCV therapy. However, it is not recommended to interrupt treatment because there is no evidence about the efficacy of the therapy after discontinuation (and restarting). Currently, patients and healthcare professionals are crushing tablets without information about efficacy and safety. Depending on the biopharmaceutical characteristics of a drug formulation, crushing tablets can lead to altered pharmacokinetics of drugs. It is important to know whether pharmacokinetic parameters are influenced by crushing of tablets; both a decrease and an increase in exposure may occur. A decrease of the plasma concentrations of ELB and/or GZR potentially reduces the therapeutic effect of the drugs. Higher doses or switching to other HCV-drugs might be needed. In contrast, in case a higher Cmax and/or AUC occurs there might be an increased risk of toxicity. As a result, crushing the drug is a contra-indication based on the available data. Therefore this study will be conducted to investigate whether a crushed ELB/GZR tablet is bioequivalent to ELB/GZR as a whole tablet.
INTRODUCTION: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is recognized as the leading cause of chronic liver disease worldwide. However, the screening rate and treatment rate of HCV-infected patients in China is low, which increases the burden of patients and the infection risk of their family members. WeChat, an instant messaging software, is used in a very high proportion in China. Health promotion based on WeChat public platform is a very convenient and effective way of health education. Therefore, this study plans to apply WeChat to conduct health intervention for HCV-infected patients. The objective is to explore the effect of We-media-based health promotion method on the detection rate and treatment rate of HCV-infected and their family members. METHOD: Recruitment will be conduct in 10 hospitals in Jilin, Beijing, Henan and Anhui provinces. The subjects should be patients new diagnosed with hepatitis C at the hospital and aged 18 to 69. After signing the consent form, eligible participants were selected through the inclusion and exclusion criteria. 1000 participants will be recruited for the trial. After completing an baseline reseach by a online questionnaire, patients will be randomly assigned to receive a targeted short article on HCV weekly or a general health article with no mention of HCV. The intervention will last three months and a follow-up will be conduct at three month after the last intervention. OUTCOMES: The primary outcome is antiviral therapy. The secondary outcomes are cognition and attitude towards hepatitis C, factors influencing antiviral therapy, time to first treatment and the compliance of treatment.