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Hepatitis C clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Hepatitis C.

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NCT ID: NCT03833362 Completed - Hepatitis C Clinical Trials

Efficacy and Safety of Narlaprevir Used in Combination With Ritonavir in Treatment-Naïve and Failed Prior Treatment With Pegylated Interferon/Ribavirin Patients With Chronic Hepatitis C Genotype 1 (PIONEER - Study)

PIONEER
Start date: May 7, 2014
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study was to confirm that combination of narlaprevir (NVR) and ritonavir (RTV) used as a metabolic inhibitor with pegylated interferon (PEG-INF) and ribavirin (RBV) leads to a superior Sustained Virological Response (SVR) rate compared to treatment with pegylated interferon and ribavirin in treatment-naïve and treatment failure patient populations.

NCT ID: NCT03831555 Completed - Hepatitis C Clinical Trials

Tool to Improve Treatment Adherence and Outcomes at Grady Liver Clinic

Start date: June 5, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to learn more about what psychological and social factors affect people in how they take their hepatitis C medications.

NCT ID: NCT03823911 Completed - Clinical trials for Cardiovascular Diseases

Cardiovascular Disease in HIV and Hepatitis C: Risk Outcomes After Hepatitis C Eradication

CHROME
Start date: November 18, 2018
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This is an interventional, non-randomized, controlled prospective study to treat HCV in mono-infected and HIV co-infected individuals and compare cardiovascular risk outcomes to HIV mono-infected controls. This pilot study will demonstrate whether functional cure of HCV reduces myocardial injury and risk of cardiovascular disease.

NCT ID: NCT03818308 Completed - Hepatitis C Clinical Trials

Trial for the Treatment of Acute Hepatitis C for 8 Weeks With Sofosbuvir/Velpatasvir

Start date: May 28, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a single arm multicenter pilot study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of treatment with sofosbuvir (SOF)/velpatasvir (VEL) fix dose combination (FDC) in patients with acute hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection.

NCT ID: NCT03817619 Completed - Hepatitis C Clinical Trials

Bioequivalence Study of Crushed Elbasvir/Grazoprevir Compared to the Whole Tablet

CRUSADE-2
Start date: March 28, 2019
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Elbasvir/grazoprevir (Zepatier®) is a once-daily tablet for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) GT1a, 1b or 4 infection containing the NS5A inhibitor elbasvir (ELB) 50 mg and the NS3/4A protease inhibitor grazoprevir (GZR) 100 mg. For patients with swallowing difficulties, administration of whole tablets can be problematic. In addition, HCV patients that are hospitalized (at intensive care units) due to severe illness (co-infections/ liver failure) might not be able to swallow medication. Therefore it is useful to know whether it is possible to administer ELB/GZR through a different route, like a feeding tube. In daily practice, information about the safety and efficacy of crushed tablets is lacking which might result in noncompliance, interruption or discontinuation of expensive HCV therapy. However, it is not recommended to interrupt treatment because there is no evidence about the efficacy of the therapy after discontinuation (and restarting). Currently, patients and healthcare professionals are crushing tablets without information about efficacy and safety. Depending on the biopharmaceutical characteristics of a drug formulation, crushing tablets can lead to altered pharmacokinetics of drugs. It is important to know whether pharmacokinetic parameters are influenced by crushing of tablets; both a decrease and an increase in exposure may occur. A decrease of the plasma concentrations of ELB and/or GZR potentially reduces the therapeutic effect of the drugs. Higher doses or switching to other HCV-drugs might be needed. In contrast, in case a higher Cmax and/or AUC occurs there might be an increased risk of toxicity. As a result, crushing the drug is a contra-indication based on the available data. Therefore this study will be conducted to investigate whether a crushed ELB/GZR tablet is bioequivalent to ELB/GZR as a whole tablet.

NCT ID: NCT03811678 Completed - Chronic Hepatitis c Clinical Trials

The Tolerability and Pharmacokinetics Study of Kangdaprevir Sodium Tablet in Healthy Adult Subjects

Start date: January 11, 2018
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The Tolerability and Pharmacokinetics Study of Kangdaprevir Sodium Tablet in Healthy Adult Subjects.

NCT ID: NCT03803410 Completed - Hepatitis C Clinical Trials

Surveillance of HCV in Uremics and Linking to Medical Care

Start date: January 7, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

HCV remains to prevail in the uremic patients under hemodialysis. The comprehensive surveillance in the risk population facilitates the link to care for HCV eradication.

NCT ID: NCT03801707 Completed - Hepatitis C Clinical Trials

Utilization of Hepatitis C Positive Kidneys in Negative Recipients

Start date: March 22, 2019
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

To evaluate the safety and feasibility of transplanting kidneys from Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infected donors into recipients without HCV infection

NCT ID: NCT03794791 Completed - Clinical trials for Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C (Disorder)

A Comprehensive HBsAg-positive Patients Centered Screening Strategy

CHARSET
Start date: February 20, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

HBV(hepatitis B virus) /HCV(hepatitis C virus) co-infection may accelerate liver disease progression and increase the risk of HCC(Hepatocellular Carcinoma)development. It is reported HCV co-infection harmfully affects liver fibrosis in HBV patients, while decompensated cirrhosis is increased in co-infected patients compared with HBV- or HCV- mono-infected patients. One meta-analysis having pooled 39 studies performed in China reported that around 5% of HCC was associated with HCV infection alone and 6% with co-infection of HBV + HCV. However, the exact prevalence of HCV infection in HBsAg(Hepatitis B virus surface antigen)(+) cohort is actually unknown. It is estimated to be between 0.7% and 16%, a percentage that varies over a wide range among several studies from literature, mainly depending on different geographical distribution and study population. However, in regions where HBV is endemic, such as China with a HBsAg positive rate of 7.18%, the probability of co-infection increases due to a similar transmission route, especially in patients with high risk of HCV infection, like dialysis, HIV infection, organ transplantation, sex workers, drug abuser, tattoo, piercing, blood donation, history of scaling or dental filling, HCV family history and so on. As for China, the awareness of HCV infection is much lower than HBV because the occult of HCV infection, also because governments as well as medical authorities didn't input enough resources to disease education. Up to now, the national HCV elimination in China is daunting because of barriers in HCV awareness/link to care, and lack of well-established strategies. On the contrary, HBV infection has been widely known and educated to general population. As an add-on benefit, it might be relatively easier to conduct HCV screening test among those HBsAg-positive population. HCV elimination in high-risk subgroups from the basis in HBV population can be achieved with greater possibility and such model could be further shared to health care societies.

NCT ID: NCT03781726 Completed - Hepatitis C Clinical Trials

Multi-center Study to Transplant Hepatitis-C Infected Kidneys

MYTHIC
Start date: April 10, 2019
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Open label multi center study for the donation of HCV positive kidneys to HCV negative recipients with interventional treatment to prevent HCV transmission upon transplantation.