View clinical trials related to Hepatitis C, Chronic.
Filter by:The goal of this study is to assess the tolerability, pharmacokinetics and antiviral activity of HEC74647 in HCV treatment naïve subjects with genotypes 1-6.
A pilot feasibility study of a small randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing a video-conferencing cognitive behavioral coping skills (VC-CBCS) group to standard of care (SC) for symptomatic patients previously diagnosed with chronic hepatitis C to evaluate feasibility, patient satisfaction and differences in symptoms, quality of life and liver markers.
The objective of this study is to assess the effectiveness of the glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (GLE/PIB) regimen in adolescent participants aged 12 to <18 years of age with chronic hepatitis C (CHC) in clinical practice in the Russian Federation. The study also plans to assess effectiveness of GLE/PIB in subpopulations of interest like co-infected hepatitis C virus (HCV)/human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) adolescents, in various HCV genotype/subgenotype, cirrhotic and non-cirrhotic participants, treatment-experienced (prior treatment with pegylated interferon (pegIFN) or IFN, and/or Ribavirin (RBV) and/or sofosbuvir [PRS]) and treatment-naïve, adolescents who use drugs (PWUD) and non-drug users.
Background: The global response to the HCV infection epidemic has been transformed by the availability of low-cost curative short course direct acting antiviral (DAA) therapy. Egypt has one of the highest burdens of HCV infection worldwide, and a large treatment programme, but reaching rural communities represents a major challenge. We report the feasibility and effectiveness of a comprehensive community-based HCV prevention, testing and treatment model in 73 villages across Egypt, with the goal to eliminate infection from all adult villagers. Methods: An HCV "educate, test and treat" programme was implemented in 73 villages across 7 governorates in Egypt between 06/2015 and 06/2018. The programme model comprised community mobilization facilitated by a network of village promoters to support the education, test and treat campaign as well as fund raising in the local community; a comprehensive testing, linkage to care and treatment of all eligible villagers aged 12 to 80 years using HCV antibody and HBsAg rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs), HCV RNA confirmation of positive cases, staging of liver disease using transient elastography (FibroScan), treatment with 12 or 24 weeks of a direct acting antiviral (DAA) regimen according to national standard of HCV care, and an assessment of cure at 12 weeks after completion of treatment (SVR12); and an education campaign to raise awareness and disseminate messages about safer practices to reduce transmission through public events, promotional materials and house-to-house visits. Key outcomes assessed in each village were: uptake of serological HCV and HBV testing, linkage to assessment and HCV viral load confirmation, uptake of treatment, and SVR12.
The purpose of this study is the evaluation of PAH in patients, who are treated with DAA medication for HCV infection.
The study will assess the safety and efficacy of AT-527 in combination with daclatasvir after 8 or 12 weeks of treatment.
This study aimed to confirm efficacy and safety of KW-136, an investigational anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) drug, combined with sofosbuvir for treatment of naive and experienced adults chronically infected with HCV. Three hundred and sixty (360) non-cirrhotic and cirrhotic subjects were medicated with KW-136 60 mg daily and sofosbuvir 400 mg daily. The treatment course lasted 12 successive weeks; thereafter all the study participants entered into a 12-week treatment-free follow-up period and an additional 12-week extension treatment-free follow-up period.
Direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy for hepatitis C virus (HCV) offers a cure to those with chronic HCV infection. For marginalized communities, linkage to care services often aren't enough to overcome barriers to accessing the medical system. For difficult to link populations, offering treatment at the same non-clinical community space may improve uptake and reduce loss-to-follow-up. The purpose of this 2 year study is to assess the feasibility, acceptability and effectiveness of accelerated initiation of commercially available DAA therapy targeting socially marginalized communities (e.g., medically underserved, homeless, people actively injecting drugs). The study will be carried out at two community sites that perform HCV testing: (a) fixed community site and (b) community mobile site via clinical research van. Participants (n=150) who test anti-HCV positive and HCV RNA positive (chronic infection) are invited to enroll into the no one waits (NOW) Study and begin HCV treatment at point of diagnosis. All evaluation, medication dissemination, and follow-up care will take place at the project site. The investigators will estimate the effect of on-site point-of-diagnosis (POD) treatment on (1) time from HCV testing to treatment initiation, (2) completing treatment, and (3) attaining (sustained virologic response) SVR-12; overall and by study site. A secondary product will be a lesson learned guide of recommendations for implementing a POD on-site test and treat program for dissemination beyond San Francisco.
This is a prospective, controlled, open-label, pharmacokinetic study. This study aims at studying the PK of ledipasvir, sofosbuvir, and GS-331007 metabolite in HCV infected children with hematological malignancy. In this study, patients in both treatment groups will receive 12 weeks of treatment with a fixed-dose combination tablet containing 45 mg of ledipasvir and 200 mg of sofosbuvir (LDV/SOF) orally, once daily with food.
A Phase I, Single Center, Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled, Single & Multiple Ascending Dose Study to Access the Tolerability and Pharmacokinetics of HEC110114 Tablets in Healthy Adult Subjects