View clinical trials related to Hepatitis A.
Filter by:This study is a multicenter, open-label, phase II clinical study in subjects with chronic hepatitis B (CHB), to characterize the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic profile and preliminary anti-hepatitis B virus (HBV) efficacy of APG-1387 in combination with entecavir, and to determine the optimal dose of APG-1387 in combination with entecavir.
Exercise is one of the most vital components of health maintenance. Exercising regularly maintains the cardiovascular system health, promotes the health of liver, and declines the risks of complications induced by CHCV. Since overweight is the main risk factor for IR and type 2 DM which may speed the liver disease progression among HCV patients, exercise is very important for maintenance and loss of weight. Further, exercise can relieve the side effects of medications of HCV, improve immunity, promote a sense of well-being, reduce levels of chronic fatigue, improve blood oxygen levels and increase the endorphins excretion which makes the patients fully energized (Elgendi, Shebl A, Sliem M, and Gary FA, 2018). Studies on exercise effect in patients with CHCV are quite scarce (de Sousa Fernandes et al., 2019). Decreased leptin levels by exercise positively modulate insulin signaling and inhibit pathology progression (Anaruma et al., 2019). Since studies investigated physical activity effect on regulating HCV related leptin levels are very little, the present study aimed to explore the response of serum leptin and liver enzymes to aerobic exercise in nondiabetic overweight men with CHCV.
This is a phase three study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Pradefovir treatment in chronic hepatitis B patients. Subject will be randomized to Pradefovir group and TDF group at a ratio of 2:1. Treatment duration will be 96w in randomization and followed by 48w in open. The interim analysis will be conducted when all subject completed the first 48-week treatment.
1. To acknowledge the prevalence of renal insufficiency and kidney-related diseases in patients with chronic hepatitis B in China through epidemiological surveys in outpatient clinics of about 150 hospitals across the country; 2. To analyze the related factors of renal insufficiency and kidney-related diseases in domestic patients with chronic hepatitis B from the aspects of demographic characteristics, family history, antiviral treatment, nephrotoxic drug use history, etc.
Examine the association of chronic liver diseases (including hepatitis B, hepatitis C, alcoholic liver disease, fatty liver, liver cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma) with other systemic diseases by retrospectively analyzing the data from the Hospital Database of Buddhist Tzu Chi Medical Foundation.
This project will utilise the notification process as a point of intervention to work with primary practitioners (GP) by contacting them directly when a notification of hepatitis C exposure is received by the Tasmanian department of Health (DoH). A designated role will exist within DoH of a specialist HCV health worker to contact GPs to provide supported assistance in the process of the follow up hepatitis C diagnoses with patients. The study will evaluate whether active follow up of providers with enhanced case management is effective in having patients linked to hepatitis C treatment compared to current standard of care of surveillance for new notifications. The study will also compare the cost-effectiveness of this approach compared to current standard of care after one of their patients is notified with a positive hepatitis C antibody result.
This study is being done to determine the effectiveness of using a combination of two different drugs in preventing the transmission of HCV from a HCV positive donor to a HCV negative solid organ recipient.
The effectiveness of mother-to-child block of CHB in pregnant women in the middle and later stages of pregnancy has been recognized by the guidelines. TAF, as a newly marketed antiviral drug, has not been conclusively concluded in terms of its efficacy and postpartum safety in preventing mother-to-child transmission in pregnant women.Our purpose is to explore the TAF for CHB the curative effect of pregnant and postnatal security.
Patients with chronic hepatitis B should maximize the inhibition of HBV replication, which could reduce the incidence of liver cancer and liver disease-related complications. However, after 96 weeks of treatment with the first-line drugs, entecavir or tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, a certain proportion of patients still had low levels of HBV replication. Tenofovir alafenamide fumarate is a newly marketed anti-hepatitis B drug that is currently considered to be non-inferior to tenofovir disoproxil fumarate and safer bone and renal effects. Therefore, this research was put forward to investigate whether tenofovir alafenamide fumarate replacement for hepatitis B had a higher virological response rate and safety in patients with low levels of virus after 48 weeks of treatment with entecavir and tenofovir disoproxil fumarate.
We will conduct a phase 4, multicenter, open-label trial at 7 academic centers in Taiwan. Chronic hepatitis B patients receiving oral antiviral therapy (entecavir [ETV], tenofovir disoproxil fumarate [TDF]) for at least 2 years, and fulfil the following nucleos(t)ide analogs discontinuation criteria. After nucleos(t)ide analogs discontinuation, patients had a clinical relapse and retreatment regimen switches to TAF. The protocol will be approved by Institutional Review Board (IRB) or Research ethic committee (REC) of each site and will be conducted in accordance with the principles of Declaration of Helsinki and the International Conference on Harmonization for Good Clinical Practice. Each patient provides written informed consent before enrollment.