View clinical trials related to Chronic Hepatitis C.
Filter by:Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection remains a significant health problem in our country. The World Health Organization estimated that 71 million people worldwide had chronic HCV infection in 2015. And 399,000 people died from cirrhosis or primary hepatocellular carcinoma caused by HCV infection. In 2006, the positive rate of HCV antibody in the population aged 1-59 was 0.43%. Therefore, it was estimated that there were about 5.6 million HCV infected people in the general population, and about 10 million cases of HCV infected people in high-risk groups and high incidence areas. Universal genotype direct antiviral agent (DAA) is the preferred antiviral therapy for hepatitis C. Sofosbuvir/velpatasvir are direct antiviral agents for hepatitis C. The results of Asian clinical trials mainly in Chinese population showed that the sustained virologic response (SVR) rates of sofosbuvir/velpatasvir at 12 weeks in genotype 1a, 1b, 2, 3a, 3b and 6 were 100%, 100%, 100%, 95%, 76% and 99%, respectively. Limited data showed that the SVR rate of sofosbuvir/velpatasvir at 12 weeks was 96% in Chinese genotype 3b patients without cirrhosis and 50% in patients with cirrhosis. After standard antiviral therapy for hepatitis C, there are still some patients who cannot obtain SVR, and these patients are defined as DAA-experienced patients. The guidelines recommend that Sofosbuvir/Velpatasvir combined with ribavirin be used as salvage therapy for patients with DAA-experienced failure. Vosevi is a new generation of antiviral therapy for hepatitis C, which contains three components, (Sofosbuvir, Velpatasvir and Voxilaprevir. It was a salvage treatment plan for DAAs-experienced patients which was recommended by the Chinese hepatitis C prevention and treatment guidelines in 2019. However, there are insufficient data on the proportion of SVR acquired in Vosevi treated DAAs-experienced patients in Asian populations and the effectivity of antiviral therapy between Vosevi and Sofosbuvir/Velpatasvir combined with ribavirin. In the present study, the investigators enroll DAAs-experienced hepatitis C patients. The participants are randomly divided into two groups. Then the participants are treated with Vosevi or Sofosbuvir/Velpatasvir combined with ribavirin respectively. All enrolled participants are followed-up for 3 years. Objectives of the present study are as follows: A. To clarify the sustained virologic response rate after Vosevi therapy for DAAs-experienced patients. B. To clarify the safety and efficacy between the Vosevi therapy and the Sofosbuvir/Velpatasvir combined with ribavirin therapy. C. To clarify the changes of biochemistry indexes in DAAs-experienced patients after Vosevi therapy. D. To clarify the virological relapse rate at 12 weeks after Vosevi therapy. E. To clarify the rate of cirrhosis and liver cancer during the follow-up.
Direct antiviral therapy (standard of care) administered to chronic hepatitis C-infected patients, in two hepatology clinics, who had used intravenous drugs in the past 6 months of signing informed consent (IC). This cohort was compared to concurrently treated chronic hepatitis C patients who were not intravenous drug users, who signed IC in these same clinics. Follow-up expected two years after cure and relapse rates recorded. Primary end point was SVR rate and secondary end points included reinfection rates in follow-up period.
Follow up of Chronic hepatitis C Patients with moderate to severe fibrosis and cirrhosis treated with Direct Acting Antivirals after Sustained Virological Response for 4-5 years to detect changes in hepatic fibrosis and liver functions.
A multicentric, observational, open-design study conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Sofosdac® 400mg/60mg tablets treatment in 100 patients with chronic hepatitis C (HCV)
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 study aims to assess the role of ribavirin as an adjuvant to sofosbuvir/velpatasvir/voxilaprevir combination in retreatment of chronic hepatitis C with previous treatment failure.
This is a single patient, single center study evaluating if administration of pan-genotypic DAA therapy on day 3 (+/- 2 days) post-kidney transplant prevents the transmission of hepatitis C virus infection from an HCV-positive donor kidney to an HCV-negative recipient.
enrolled participants were treated orally with SOF plus a fixed dose combination of OBV/PTV/r plus RBV.
Experienced participants who had HCV GT4 infection were treated with Sofosbuvir/Simeprevir/Daclatasvir/Ribavirin (SOF/SMV/DCV/RBV)
This study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of DCV plus sofosbuvir (SOF) with or without ribavirin (RBV) for treatment of Egyptian participants infected with HCV GT4.