View clinical trials related to Hepatitis C, Chronic.
Filter by:Rationale: Chronic HCV infection is characterised by a weak HCV specific CD8+ T cell response, due to continuous pressure of high viral load. Treatment of chronic HCV patients with ASV and DCV will result in a significant drop in HCV viral load. At present, no information is available on the immunological effects of treatment with ASV and DCV, nor on the early effects of viral load reduction caused by a compound that is thought not to possess direct immunomodulatory effects. This information will be crucial for a better understanding of the mechanisms that may limit the effectiveness of treatment, occurrence of viral rebound or relapses during, at the end of treatment or during the follow up period. Objective: To evaluate in detail the functionality of immune cells in blood in chronic HCV patients before, during and after treatment with ASV and DCV, in an IFN-free regimen. Study design: This is an investigator-initiated single center open label study with one arm of 12 patients. Study population: Adult chronic HCV patients with genotype 1b, who are previous non-responders to the treatment. Intervention (if applicable): All patients will be treated with twice daily a 200 mg oASV and once daily a 60 mg DCV for 24 weeks. Main study parameters/endpoints: 1. Phenotype and function of blood leukocytes during treatment; frequency of HCV-specific T cells, NK cells and monocytes 2. Gene expression levels of leukocyte populations before, during and after treatment 3. Gene expression levels of the type I IFN signaling pathway on whole blood samples 4. Serum cytokines levels using multiplex platforms
The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy of a 12- or 24-week treatment regimen of simeprevir in combination with daclatasvir, as measured by sustain virologic response 12 (SVR12), in treatment-naive, chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1b-infected participants who have advanced fibrosis or compensated cirrhosis (METAVIR F3/F4).
The purpose of this study in HCV genotype 4-infected subjects with compensated cirrhosis is to assess the safety and to compare the percentage of subjects achieving a 12-week sustained virologic response (SVR12), [HCV ribonucleic acid (RNA) < lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) 12 weeks following treatment], to a clinically relevant threshold [based on SVR rates for HCV genotype 4-infected subjects treated with pegylated interferon (pegIFN)/RBV]. The 12 and 16-week arms have been fully enrolled. As of 19 May 2015, they were closed and the two 24-week arms were opened for enrollment.
The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy of a 12-week regimen containing simeprevir, daclatasvir and sofosbuvir in participants with decompensated liver disease (the liver function is insufficient) due to genotype 1 or 4 Hepatitis (inflammation of the liver) C virus (HCV) infection by assessing sustained virologic response 12-weeks after the end of study drug treatment (SVR12).
To assess the antiviral effect, safety and pharmacokinetics of rising doses of 10 mg, 20 mg, 40 mg, 60 mg, 80 mg, 100 mg, 150 mg, 200 mg, 300 mg, 450 mg, 650 mg, 900 mg oral BILB 1941 ZW administered Q8H in a polyethyleneglycol 400 (PEG 400): distilled water: Tromethamine (TRIS) drinking solution for five days to patients with chronic HCV genotype 1 infection
This study will look at the safety and efficacy of 8 week and 12 week treatment with Sofosbuvir and Simeprevir in treatment-naïve and treatment-experienced patients with chronic hepatitis C genotype 4.
The purpose of this study is to show superiority of simeprevir (SMV) in combination with sofosbuvir for 12 weeks versus a historical control. Historical control will be a composite of the observed historical sustained virological response at Week 12 (SVR12) rates of SMV in combination with (pegylated) interferon (PegIFN)/ribavirin (RBV) of the subpopulations in study HPC3011 (NCT01567735) and will depend on the percentage of treatment-naive, prior relapser, prior non-responder, interferon (IFN)-intolerant and other subjects enrolled in this study.
The primary objective of this study is: To evaluate the real-world safety, specifically the incidence rates of hepatic toxicity, pyrexia, and resistance, of DCV/ASV dual therapy in Japanese patients chronically infected with HCV GT-1.
The purpose of this phase 2/3, open-label, multipart, multicenter study was to evaluate the efficacy, and safety of co-administration of ABT-493 and ABT-530 with and without ribavirin (RBV) in chronic HCV genotype 2 (GT2-), genotype 3 (GT3-), genotype 4 (GT4), genotype 5 (GT5-), or genotype 6 (GT6-) infected participants with or without cirrhosis.
The purpose of this Phase 2, open-label, 2-part, multicenter study was to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and pharmacokinetics of co-administration of ABT-493 and ABT-530 with and without ribavirin (RBV) at different doses in chronic Hepatitis C virus (HCV) Genotype 1 (GT1), Genotype 4 (GT4), Genotype 5 (GT5), and Genotype 6 (GT6) infection with compensated cirrhosis (GT1 only) or without cirrhosis (GT1, GT4, GT5, or GT6). Although RBV was initially planned in the protocol, it was not administered in any of the study arms.