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Hepatitis B clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Hepatitis B.

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NCT ID: NCT05195450 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Non-cirrhotic, Chronic Hepatitis B

TAF (Tenofovir Alafenamide) for Preventing Progression of Liver Disease in Non-cirrhotic Chronic HBV Infection With Normal ALT and Low Viral Load.

Start date: February 23, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The main goal of therapy for patients with chronic HBV infection with no significant liver disease is to improve survival and quality of life by preventing disease progression, development of liver cirrhosis and consequently HCC development. The likelihood of achieving these goals depends on the timing of therapy during the natural course of the infection but also on the stage of the disease and the patients' age when treatment is started. The inhibition of viral replication and normalization of ALT by antiviral treatment has been shown to achieve the elimination of chronic HBV-induced necroinflammatory activity and progressive fibrotic liver progression in the vast majority of patients, in turn reducing the risk of HCC. Even in HBeAg positive patients, treatment-induced HBeAg loss and seroconversion to antiHBe characterizes the induction of a partial immune control often leading to a low replicative phase of the chronic HBV infection and good outcomes. Treatment in chronic HBV infection is indicated in - presence of advanced fibrosis/cirrhosis (LSM >11 KPA) or patients with significant fibrosis (LSM >8 or APRI >1.5 or >F2 on liver biopsy) with high viral load (>2000 IU/ml) or significantly elevated ALT (x2 ULN). Presence of any of these factors is known to increase the risk of development of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. TAF in non-cirrhotic patients (LSM <8 KPA) with normal ALT and low viral load (HBV DNA <2000 IU/ml) (currently treatment ineligible) as compared to delayed initiation (on demand) might reduce HCC risk, progression of liver fibrosis and reduction in HBsAg levels. As TAF is known to have favorable effects on the overall long-term outcome, the main clinical challenge is to identify the patients at risk of HCC and cirrhosis who warrant early antiviral therapy.

NCT ID: NCT05189288 Completed - Chronic Hepatitis b Clinical Trials

Clinical Study to Evaluate the Pharmacokinetics, Safety and Tolerability of CKD-388(2) in Healthy Subjects

Start date: January 14, 2022
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This study is an open-label, randomized, single dose, crossover study to evaluate the pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability of CKD-388 in healthy subjects

NCT ID: NCT05182463 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Hepatitis B, Chronic

Peginterferon Treatment Study for Inactive Chronic Hepatitis B Patients

Start date: January 8, 2022
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

There are about 400 million chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection patients worldwide, posing a serious threat to global public health security. In China, HBV infection occured mainly in the perinatal period or infants, and about 10% of patients in the immune tolerance stage spontaneously transit to the immune clearance stage every year and become HBeAg-negative chronic HBV infection, resulting in a significant increase in the number of inactive chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients. In recent years, different guidelines have not reached consensus on the need to initiate antiviral therapy for inactive CHB patients: In the guidelines of Asian Pacific Association for The Study of Liver(APASL)-2015 and American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases(AASLD)-2018, antiviral therapy is generally not recommended for this group of patients, and regular outpatient follow-up is recommended. Guideline of European Association for the Study of the Liver(EASL)-2017 suggests that people with a family history of cirrhosis and liver cancer at this stage could be treated with antiviral therapy even if they did not meet the indications of antiviral therapy. According to Guidelines for the Prevention and Treatment of Chronic Hepatitis B (version 2019) of China, antiviral therapy is still recommended for some patients with inactive HBsAg carrier status who are HBV DNA positive and meet the treatment indications. Studies have shown that some patients in immune tolerance stage may enter the immune clearance stage and have hepatitis flare. Patients of inactive CHB have the potential to develop HBeAg-negative CHB, and studies of long-term follow-up in this population have indicated the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma. With the popularization of the concept of functional cure for chronic hepatitis B, more and more people with inactive CHB have a strong desire for treatment. In recent years, several studies have demonstrated that Pegylated-interferon therapy can achieve high functional cure rate in patients with inactive CHB. The purpose of this study is to establish a national multi-center, prospective real world study to compare the efficacy of different antiviral treatment regimens for patients with inactive CHB and seek for the factors of functional cure.

NCT ID: NCT05181956 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Hepatitis D Infection With Hepatitis B

Testing and Epidemiology of Delta Hepatitis

Start date: January 3, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Study is to 1. Understand the pattern of hepatitis delta screening among medical providers for Asian patients with chronic hepatitis B 2. Determine the proportion of Asian hepatitis B patients who have been screened and who have chronic hepatitis delta 3. Determine the pattern of hepatitis delta screening after education of medical providers on hepatitis delta

NCT ID: NCT05181826 Recruiting - Cancer Clinical Trials

Collection of Blood From Healthy Patients, Patients With Benign Disease and Patients With Cancer

ELITE
Start date: May 21, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

To acquire blood samples from subjects for various purposes, including: i) determining the sensitivity and specificity of select DNA methylation markers for the detection of various types of cancer, ii) identifying benign conditions that may induce false positive or false negative results, and iii) defining the effects of potential interfering substances, such as chemotherapy drugs.

NCT ID: NCT05177926 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Hepatitis B, Chronic

Preventing Mother-to-child Transmission of Hepatitis B Virus With Tenofovir Alafenamide (TAF)

Start date: April 4, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) for prevention of mother-to-child transmission of hepatitis B virus among pregnant women with high level HBV DNA.

NCT ID: NCT05172453 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Hepatitis B, Chronic

Mother-to-child Transmission of HBV in China

Start date: July 1, 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In order to evaluate the feasibility of eliminating mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of hepatitis B virus (HBV) by 2030, a multi-center, prospective cohorts study was conducted to investigate MTCT of HBV in China.

NCT ID: NCT05168293 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Hepatitis B, Chronic

Effect of Entecavir Versus Tenofovir on HBV DNA Level in Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells

Start date: February 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Liver disease associated with persistent hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection remains an important public health problem with significant morbidity and mortality. In spite of the existence of an effective vaccine, worldwide approximately 260 million people are chronic HBV surface antigen (HBsAg) carriers and current treatment with interferon and/or nucleoside analogues (NA) is not able to achieve a complete cure. The key obstacle to HBV eradication is the persistence of HBV DNA in the nuclei of infected hepatocytes, either integrated into the host genome or as a covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) episomal form. While HBV integration is rare and its clinical implications still require investigation, cccDNA plays an essential role in the long-term persistence of HBV infection and can often be detected even following NA therapy and HBsAg seroconversion. Since quantification of cccDNA in infected hepatocytes requires invasive liver biopsy, more accessible tissues, such as serum or peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) have been investigated in different patient populations.

NCT ID: NCT05147090 Recruiting - Cirrhosis Clinical Trials

Effects of Empagliflozin on Fibrosis and Cirrhosis in Chronic Hepatitis B

Start date: January 2, 2022
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Chronic hepatitis B (CHB) affects 257million individuals worldwide. In 2017, it caused around 39.7 million cases of cirrhosis and 0.4 million cirrhosis-related deaths in 2017. However, there is no specific treatment for liver fibrosis/cirrhosis. Although nucleos(t)ide analogues (NAs) profoundly suppress viral replication, fibrosis/cirrhosis progression can still occur in NA-treated patients. Sodium-glucose cotransporter type-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors are antidiabetic drugs that may prevent fibrosis/cirrhosis progression by reducing hepatic steatosis/inflammation, dampening renin-angiotensin aldosterone system (RAAS) activation, and reducing fluid retention, effects of which are independent of glycemic control. Clinical studies in diabetic patients show SGLT2 inhibitors reduce hepatis steatosis/inflammation, regress ascites (a cirrhotic complication), and improve liver function parameters and survival prognosis in terms of model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) score. There are currently no randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on role of SGLT2 inhibitors in preventing fibrosis/cirrhosis progression in CHB patients. Magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) and transient elastography (TE) are non-invasive techniques for liver stiffness measurement (LSM), although MRE is more accurate than TE. The investigators propose a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial to compare effect of empagliflozin (an SGLT2 inhibitor) with placebo (1:1 ratio) in preventing fibrosis progression in both diabetic and non-diabetic NA-treated CHB patients with significant/advanced fibrosis or compensated cirrhosis. 108 patients will be randomly sampled from our pre-existing TE database. Empagliflozin 10mg daily will be given to treatment arm. Placebo pills will be manufactured identical in appearance to empagliflozin. Subjects will receive active or placebo pills for three years, and undergo clinical, anthropometric and laboratory assessments (at baseline, weeks 8, 16, and every 4 months thereafter). They will undergo LSM by TE at baseline, end of first, second and third year, and by MRE at baseline and end of third year. Primary outcome is difference in change to liver stiffness (measured by MRE) from baseline between the two groups at the end of third year. The study results will determine whether SGLT2 inhibitors can prevent hepatic fibrosis/cirrhosis progression in NA-treated CHB patients.

NCT ID: NCT05144776 Recruiting - Hepatitis B Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) DNA Test as Point of Care Tool

HBVPOCT
Start date: November 17, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a cross sectional observational study to asses the performance of two novel HBV DNA testing methodologies; a) dried blood spot sampling and b) fingerstick capillary blood using the Xpert® Hepatitis B Virus viral load assay. Both novel testing methodologies will be compared with venous blood tested using a gold standard HBV DNA assay. The sensitivity and specificity of the two novel testing will be evaluated. HBV viral load tests are essential to guide antiviral treatment eligibility and effectiveness. However, many people are unable to access these tests, particularly those living in remote or limited resources settings given high cost, or unavailable infrastructure. Simple, affordable and accessible HBV viral load tests are required to increase global access to HBV testing and treatment to meet the WHO HBV elimination targets. The GeneXpert Diagnostic Systems, the most common molecular point-of-care platform globally, has the potential to provide simple and affordable HBV viral load tests. Dried Blood Spot testing is also an affordable and accessible testing methodology particularly suited to remote and resource limited settings. This proof-of-concept study will assess the feasibility and diagnostic performance of Xpert® HBV Viral Load test and Dried Blood Spot testing for the quantitation of HBV DNA from fingerstick capillary samples.