View clinical trials related to Hepatitis C, Chronic.
Filter by:The goal of this pilot study is to examine both efficacy and tolerability in patients with HCV genotype 1 and mild decompensation with Child-Pugh-Turcott score of 6 or lower. The CPT score is used to assess the prognosis of chronic liver diseases, as well as the required strength and treatment and necessity of liver transplantation. A higher CPT score denotes higher necessity of liver transplantation.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the percentage of participants with sustained virologic response 12 weeks after the actual end of study treatment (SVR12)
The purpose of this study is to examine whether neurocognitive impairments experienced by patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection can be reversed by treating HCV, with a new combination of direct acting antiviral drugs (daclatasvir (DCV), asunaprevir (ASV) and beclabuvir (BCV)). The study will assess the effect of HCV on the central nervous system (CNS) by assessing neurocognitive function and brain injury prior to treatment, and comparing it to the end of treatment, and 4, 12 and 24 weeks after treatment.
This is a study of the safety and effectiveness of the hepatitis C medications sofosbuvir and simeprevir in patients who have both the HIV and hepatitis C (HCV) viruses.
This is a randomized, multi-site, open-label trial of a fixed-dose combination of Grazoprevir (MK-5172) and Elbasvir (MK-8742) versus Boceprevir (BOC) / Pegylated Interferon (P) and Ribavirin (R) in treatment-naive and prior treatment failure genotype (GT) 1 hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected participants. The primary hypothesis is that the proportion of treatment-naive (TN) and prior treatment failure (PTF) participants treated with grazoprevir + elbasvir achieving sustained virologic response (undetectable HCV ribonucleic acid [RNA]) 12 weeks after the end of study therapy (SVR12) will be greater than the proportion of BOC/PR-treated participants achieving SVR12.
The aim of the study is to analyse data coming from two treatment centres of the National Treatment Program Centres of hepatitis C in Egypt
The purpose of this study is to show the superiority of a 4 weeks lead-in phase of Vitamin D followed by a 48 weeks combination of Vitamin D with PEG-IFN plus RBV in comparison with standard PEG-IFN + RBV in untreated Egyptian patients with chronic hepatitis C, on the sustained virological response (SVR) at 3 months after end of treatment (week 60).
This is a randomized, double blind, multi-center, placebo controlled, three parallel arms, Phase IIb/III clinical study to evaluate the effects of adding a TCM-700C with a low or high dose onto the combination treatment (PegIFN plus RBV) for subjects with naive genotype 1 HCV infection. This will be demonstrated by a higher sustained virologic response rate, defined as the absence of detectable HCV RNA 24 weeks after the termination of combination treatment, compared with the placebo add-on.
The purpose of this study is to explore whether silibinin plus ribavirin with/without peg-interferon can be more effective than the peg-interferon plus ribavirin based standard of care (SoC) in the treatment of patients infected with hepatitis C virus genotype 4.
The aim of this trial is to evaluate efficacy and safety of treatment with 600 mg of BID BI 207127 in combination with 120 mg QD Faldaprevir and RBV compared to a Telaprevir-based regimen along with PegIFN and RBV in chronically infected HCV GT1 treatment naïve patients, including patients with compensated cirrhosis.