View clinical trials related to Hepatitis B, Chronic.
Filter by:A single center, open-label, study to evaluate the intra-hepatic effect of inarigivir dose per day and three times per week on immune response and viral markers in virally suppressed patients with chronic hepatitis B infection
Open-label, extension study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of combination therapy and its effect on sustained viral response biomarkers.
This study is designed to assess the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics (PD) of single and multiple ascending doses in healthy volunteers (HV) and participants diagnosed with chronic hepatitis B (CHB).
The primary objectives of this study are to evaluate the safety and tolerability of the 12 week treatment regimens of inarigivir soproxil plus tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) or commercially available nucleoside/nucleotide (NUC) in adults with chronic hepatitis B (CHB), to evaluate the antiviral activity of 12 weeks of inarigivir soproxil plus TAF versus TAF alone in viremic CHB participants (Groups 1-3, 5), and to evaluate the antiviral activity of 12 weeks of inarigivir soproxil with commercially available NUC(s) in virally suppressed CHB participants (Group 4).
Previous studies indicated that Granulocyte Macrophage-colony Stimulating Factor (GM-CSF) could improve survival rate in patients with acute liver failure and obtain higher HBsAg seroconversion rate when in combination with peg-interferon for chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients. In this study, investigators will study the clinical effect of entecavir (ETV) plus GM-CSF in patients with CHB compared to ETV monotherapy.
This is an open-label, randomized, multi-part study to evaluate the relative oral bioavailability of a tablet formulation of AL-3778 (formerly NVR 3-778) administered under fasted and fed conditions (Parts 1 and 2) and the drug-drug interaction between AL-3778 and entecavir or tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (Part 3).
The purpose of this study is to determine the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of ALN-HBV in healthy adult volunteers and patients with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. In addition, the study will assess antiviral efficacy of ALN-HBV in patients with HBV.
Normal healthy volunteer (NHV) participants will enroll sequentially into a total of 6 escalating dose levels (6 subjects per dose level), randomized to receive a single dose of ARC-521 Injection or placebo. The maximum study duration for NHVs is approximately 21 weeks. Hepatitis B e Antigen (HBeAg)-negative participants with (CHB) will enroll sequentially into 3 dose levels (8 patients per dose level) to receive multiple doses of open label ARC-521 Injection. For each CHB participant the maximum study duration is approximately 37 weeks.
Chronic HBV patients will receive 9 doses of open-label ARC-520 once every 4 weeks and be evaluated for safety and efficacy.
This is a multiple-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, single-ascending dose and multiple-ascending dose, adaptive parallel study to investigate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of RO7020322 following oral administration in healthy participants and chronic hepatitis B patients.