View clinical trials related to Hepatitis C, Chronic.
Filter by:The investigators propose to conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial comparing treatment as usual (TaU) for HCV screening (rapid anti-HCV screening and referral) to a intervention screening that includes TaU plus a rapid point-of-care HCV RNA test in persons experiencing homelessness. The primary outcome of interest is linkage-to-care. Linkage to care is defined as evaluation by a health care provider for HCV infection within 30 days of baseline screening and referral. We will compare the proportion of patients who are evaluated by a provider within the 30 day window in each study arm: (1) participants who screened positive with rapid anti-HCV and are referred for evaluation) and (2) Rapid HCV RNA plus TaU (those who tested positive with both rapid anti-HCV and confirmatory RNA and are also referred to a provider.) Secondarily, the investigators will also assess HCV RNA levels in both groups twelve weeks after treatment ends (24 to 36 weeks after anti-HCV screening) to determine the percent of individuals who achieved sustained virologic response (SVR12), which is a marker for cure.
This study is a two-way, non-interventional long-term dynamic follow-up clinical observational cohort study. In the Second Division of Liver Diseases, Beijing Ditan Hospital, Capital Medical University, chronic hepatitis C patients who were treated with interferon combined with ribavirin (PR) antiviral therapy (PR treatment for 6 months or more) and / or direct acting antivirals (DAAs ), and the baseline, antiviral treatment and discontinuation follow-up data of patients before antiviral treatment were collected, and follow-up observations of patients were carried out for every 3-6 months. The clinical data such as clinical biochemistry, HCV RNA and serological indicators (anti-HCV), AFP, and liver imaging (liver ultrasound) were collected during the study period. The virological response and clinical outcomes of chronic hepatitis C antiviral therapy were observed for at least 144 weeks. The incidence of liver cancer and decompensated liver cirrhosis after discontinuation of the drug was the main evaluation index. The aim is to explore long-term virological response and clinical outcomes, and elucidate its influencing factors.
Multicenter, open-label, phase II safety and efficacy study of all-oral combination of narlaprevir/ritonavir and sofosbuvir in Treatment-naïve Patients with Chronic Hepatitis C Genotype 1.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the drug-drug-interaction (DDI), pharmacokinetics (PK) and tolerability of HEC74647 combined with HEC110114 in healthy subjects
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common type of liver cancer, its survival rate ranks only second to lung cancer and it is a severe threat to human health. In Egypt, HCC constitutes a significant public health problem. Where it is responsible for 33.63% and 13.54% of all cancers in males and females respectively. It has a poor prognosis after discovery, which is usually at a late stage of disease. This had been strongly linked to the hepatitis C virus epidemic that affected around 10-15% of the Egyptian population during the last 3 decades, and was reported as the highest prevalence of HCV in the world. However, the pathophysiological mechanisms involved remain unclear. The occurrence of HCC is a complicated process involving multiple genes and steps. Imbalances in cellular signal transduction pathways, deficiencies in DNA repair regulating genes, activation of protooncogenes, inactivation of tumor suppressor genes and epigenetic modifications all promote the occurrence of liver cancer.
This study will assess the safety and effectiveness of Maviret (Glecaprevir plus Pibrentasvir (GLE/PIB)) in adolescent participants diagnosed with chronic hepatitis C (CHC) in a real world setting across clinical practice in Japan.
Observational Study to check metabolic changes between two different hepatitis C antiviral medication groups. This study will evaluate the impact of different treatments on Serum lipid changes, fasting blood glucose and glycated hemoglobin . It will determine if changes are due to different Antiviral regimens or due to different Sustained virological response rates.
The aim of CELINE is to retrieve and re-evaluate lost to follow-up chronic hepatitis C patients in the Netherlands.
A Phase Ib/IIa, Single Center, Randomized, open, Sofosbuvir-controlled, Multiple Ascending Dose Study to Access the Tolerability,Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of HEC110114 Tablets in HCV-infected Subjects
This is a one-time cross-sectional survey study of approximately 200 self-identified black or African-American patients who have had chronic hepatitis C viral infection (HCV) that will evaluate patients' willingness to participate (WTP) in health/medical research related to HCV and attitudinal factors that might be associated with WTP, such as benefits and barriers to research participation, mistrust of physicians/researchers, health literacy, and knowledge of health/research studies.