Clinical Trials Logo

Chronic Hepatitis B Virus clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Chronic Hepatitis B Virus.

Filter by:
  • Active, not recruiting  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT02992704 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Hepatitis, B Virus

Peg-interferon for Inactive Chronic Hepatitis B Carriers

INACTIVE
Start date: August 2016
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Chronic Hepatitis B carriers (normal LFTs and viral load < 2 x 10^4 IU/ml are not recommended to be treated by guidelines as they are at low risk for complications. However, it is unclear if treatment can enhance HBsAg loss which has been shown to be associated with significantly lower risk of complications compared to those without HBsAg loss. Consequently, this is a proof of concept study to determine the possibility of HBsAg loss in Chronic Hepatitis B carriers in a randomised open label clinical trial comparing no treatment to 24 weeks peg-interferon alpha 2a or 48 weeks peginterferon alpha 2a (randomised 1:1:1). The primary endpoint of HBsAg loss will be evaluated 24 weeks after the end of therapy for those on therapy and matched to an equivalent timepoint in the control arm. The sample size calculation is 30 patients in each arm for a 20% difference between any experimental arm and the control arm.

NCT ID: NCT02845401 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Hepatitis B Virus

The Hepatitis B e-Antigen Negative Disease - Directly Offered Study of Treatment Withdrawal in Patients With e-Antigen Negative Chronic HBV Infection (BeNEG-DO).

BeNEG-DO
Start date: November 17, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators' research is aimed at developing more effective, finite approaches for managing individual patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB). This prospective clinical and basic scientific study exclusively focuses on patients with the early antigen negative form of disease, which in developed countries is treated indefinitely with antiviral drugs. The investigators' study "BeNEG-DO," directly offers patients who are already taking standard oral Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) antiviral therapy for at least 192 weeks the option to stop or continue treatment. Drawing on data from pilot studies, including the investigators' own University of California, San Francisco and Sutter Institutional Review Board-approved study, the investigators will examine a finite HBV treatment strategy on clinical outcome and safety. In conjunction, the investigators will study immunologic mechanisms and gene expression profiles that correlate with and predict the post-treatment clinical course. The BeNEG-DO study could seriously question, and potentially change, the current treatment paradigm for millions of patients with CHB and also lead to new disease-terminating antiviral therapeutics.