View clinical trials related to Hepatitis A.
Filter by:A prospective cross-sectional study in which surgically non-invasive sample-taking is done only for the purpose of the study. Capillary (fingerstick) whole blood and EDTA venipuncture whole blood are collected by a healthcare professional. The collected samples of capillary and EDTA whole blood are tested on iStatis and EDTA whole blood sample will be processed to obtain serum and plasma samples to be tested on the iStatis. An aliquot of the collected serum sample will be shipped to the central laboratory for confirmatory testing. The results from iStatis HBsAg Test results will not be used for patient management decisions.
Alcohol-associated hepatitis is a clinical syndrome distinct from steatohepatitis or liver cirrhosis. It is associated with high mortality and characterized by an absence of effective treatment, while corticosteroids, which are currently used as the first-line treatment are effective only in a subpopulation of patients and only on 28-days survival - their effect on survival does not last beyond this interval. The proposed study is a complex exploratory study of alcohol-associated hepatitis with several epidemiology- and prognosis-related aims.
The goal of this observational study is to clarify the clinical characteristics of autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) in China. The main questions it aims to answer are: Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) gene susceptibility in Chinese AIH patients prognostic factors associated with AIH Participants will provide liver tests results and details of treatment during follow-up.
Alcoholic hepatitis, the most florid form of alcoholic liver disease, has a very high short-term mortality of up to 50% and no specific therapies are available other than steroids. Steroids also only show a limited utility in improving the short-term survival and boast no evidence of any long-term benefits. Additionally, only a small proportion of patients with alcoholic hepatitis are eligible to receive steroids. Thus, a large number of patients are either not eligible or do not respond to steroids and this group outnumbers those who do respond to steroids, leaving us without any specific therapeutic options for a majority of these individuals.[1] Even liver transplantation is not feasible in most cases due to the presence of sepsis or recent alcohol consumption and many ethical and logistic issues are involved despite the documented safety and survival benefits of early liver transplantation in patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis (SAH) not responding to medical management.[2,8] Therefore, newer, more effective, and nontransplant therapeutic options for managing severe alcoholic hepatitis are needed. TPE is expected to be an effective and well-tolerated bridge therapy in patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis of moderate severity not improving on SMT and without immediate prospects for liver transplantation.
The goal of this observational study is to evalue the cumulative proportion of patients with OBI who do not develop HBsAg seroreversion and/or an increase of serum HBV DNA by at least 1 log above the lower limit of detection of the assay in a patient who had previously undetectable HBsAg and HBV DNA in serum during the study.
This study is a research aiming to identify knowledge , attitude and practice of population in a village in a remote governorate towards viral hepatitis B and C . It involves home visit interviews with population in this village with the use of questionnaire involving questions asked by the researcher that would be orally answered by the participants to be recorded in papers by the researcher.
Alcoholic hepatitis (AH) is a serious complication of alcoholic liver disease (ALD). The histological presentation of AH is characterized by neutrophilic lobular inflammation, macrovesicular steatosis, hepatocyte ballooning and necrosis and the presence of Mallory bodies. In cases of severe HA, defined by a modified Maddrey score of 32 or above, mortality at 1 month is estimated at between 10 and 50%. The only treatment to reduce early mortality is corticosteroid therapy. However, only 60% of patients respond to corticosteroids, and no benefit has been demonstrated on late mortality. Identifying new therapeutic targets is therefore a major challenge in this disease. Numerous pre-clinical studies and human data suggest the involvement of the intestinal microbiota in the pathogenesis of AH. Translocation of viable bacteria and microbial products from the digestive tract to the liver contributes to local and systemic inflammation, hepatocyte death and fibrogenesis. However, the intrahepatic microbial environment has never been characterized in HA. The study hypothesis is that the intrahepatic microbiota is modulated by bacterial translocation and is associated with clinical outcomes. The aim of this study is to determine the composition of the intrahepatic (obtained from transjugular liver biopsy), blood and fecal microbiota in patients with suspected severe AH from a monocentric prospective cohort in the Hepatology Department at Croix-Rousse Hospital (Lyon). Fifty consecutive patients with clinical suspicion of AH and indication for transjugular liver biopsy will be included. About thirty-five patients are expected in the confirmed AH group, and 15 in the group "alcoholic liver disease with no AH", based on data from the literature. The composition of the various microbiota will be determined by sequencing the 16S rRNA gene, and the results will be correlated with clinical data (corticosteroid sensitivity, overall survival, transplant-free survival, MELD score in particular) and histological data. This exploratory study will enable to analyze the intra-hepatic microbiota, and to study its link with intra-hepatic inflammation and the clinical course of patients with AH. The data generated by HepMAH will thus help identify potential new therapeutic targets linked to the gut microbiota, and provide a scientific basis for the development of therapeutic interventions targeting the microbiota in HA.
The goal of this study is to test MRG-001 (an experimental medication). The purpose of this trial is to assess the dose related safety, Pharmacokinetics, and Pharmacodynamics of MRG-001 in patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis (AH).
Hepatitis A virus (HAV) vaccine is an effective strategy to prevent natural HAV infection. In Thailand, there are 2 types of HAV vaccine available, including inactivated HAV vaccine and live-attenuated HAV vaccine. This study aims to compare the immunogenicity and safety of inactivated and lived-attenuated HAV vaccine among Thai healthy children and adolescents age 18 months to 18 years.
his clinical trial was conducted to determine the non-inferiority and safety of prophylactic antiviral treatment of Tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) compared to Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) in patients with malignant hematological diseases requiring prophylactic hepatitis B antiviral treatment. Confirm. In the case of TAF, domestic evidence when used as a first-line treatment is insufficient, so in this clinical trial, the virus suppression effect compared to TDF during the first administration of TAF to patients with malignant hematological diseases requiring prophylactic hepatitis B antiviral treatment was investigated. We aim to secure non-inferiority and additionally confirm the safety of TAF's known advantages of reducing renal function damage and protecting bone function.