View clinical trials related to Hepatitis C, Chronic.
Filter by:A multicentric, observational, open-design study conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Sofosdac® 400mg/60mg tablets treatment in 100 patients with chronic hepatitis C (HCV)
Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection represents a crucial health problem in children that greatly influence their quality of life. Many efforts have been directed toward the investment of effective drugs with high safety profiles and with oral administration for better compliance. The development of a new direct-acting antiviral (DAA) made it possible to achieve these goals.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the evolution of liver injury with fibrosis data obtained using non-invasive serological markers in patients who achieved SVR after treatment with direct-acting antivirals.
Primary Objective: To determine the P1101 pharmacokinetic (PK) profile at the single dose of 400 μg.
This study aims to assess the role of ribavirin as an adjuvant to sofosbuvir/velpatasvir/voxilaprevir combination in retreatment of chronic hepatitis C with previous treatment failure.
The main objective of this study is to assess the interest (linkage to care) of the Cepheid GeneXpert HCV VL Fingerstick test in Brussels among drug users or former users in contact with the Réseau Hépatite C Bruxelles organization through different partners of this network.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is among the most common of all chronic liver diseases. HCV predominantly affects liver cells and causes the liver to become inflamed and damaged. This can lead to cirrhosis (scarring of the liver), liver cancer or the need for liver transplant. This study will evaluate how effective glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (GLE/PIB) is in participants with chronic HCV infection. Effectiveness will be assessed as the achievement of sustained virologic response. GLE/PIB is an approved drug for the treatment of HCV. Participants 12 years or older with chronic HCV infection will be enrolled. This is a prospective (conducted in future) study in therapy of direct-acting antiviral (DAA) treatment-experienced participants with chronic hepatitis C genotype 1. Around 67 participants will be enrolled at multiple sites in Russian Federation. Participants will receive oral GLE/PIB tablets as prescribed by the physician in accordance with local clinical practice, international guidelines and/or label. Prescription is independent from this study and is decided before providing opportunity to the participate in the study. There is expected to be no additional burden for participants in this trial. All study visits will occur during routine clinical practice and participants will be followed for 12 weeks.
Chronic viral hepatitis C is a public health problem and several management recommendations are available. According to the HAS, hepatitis C screening consists of a targeted screening of people at risk of infection by the virus, in particular to drug users, to people from countries with a high prevalence of the virus or who have received care in those countries, people transfused before 1992, or people who have been or have been imprisoned. Our study proposes to evaluate hepatitis C screening in consenting patients hospitalized in Saint Joseph. These previously identified patients with comorbidities will be cared for according to current national practices that reduce HCV morbidity and mortality.
enrolled participants were treated orally with SOF plus a fixed dose combination of OBV/PTV/r plus RBV.
Experienced participants who had HCV GT4 infection were treated with Sofosbuvir/Simeprevir/Daclatasvir/Ribavirin (SOF/SMV/DCV/RBV)