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Active Not RecruitingNCT06603311

Finite Treatment of Hepatitis Delta With Bulevirtide: Identification of Biomarkers Associated With Sustained Control of HDV Infection

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
20 (estimated)
Sponsor
Hannover Medical School · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Finding biomarkers for stopping bulevirtide treatment of patients with hepatitis delta

Detailed description

This is a multicenter, prospective, single-arm, discontinuation study in which patients who have been treated with BLV for at least 48 weeks, are intentionally discontinued from the treatment. Currently, the treatment duration has not yet been defined and BLV can be given as long as a clinical benefit; is evident. In patients with advanced liver disease, maintenance treatment is recommended by most experts. In pivotal phase II studies in which patients were treated with BLV for 24-48 weeks, some patients (10-20%) maintained a reduced HDV viral load with normal liver enzymes after the end of treatment (Wedemeyer et al., 2018, 2019, 2020). However, it is completely unclear which patients are able to control HDV infection without antiviral therapies. Biomarkers would be needed to identify patients in whom treatment can stopped safely. This is even more important because HDV flares can be life-threatening in the event of a relapse after stopping BLV. Thus, the main aim of this study is to explore biomarkers in blood and liver associated with maintained virological control after at least 24 weeks of HDV-RNA levels below 100 IU/ml, with at least 2 tests plus one test at screening, on BLV treatment. The investigators hypothesize that biomarker-based criteria should be able to identify patients with a sustained immune control. This information would be highly relevant to personalize treatment duration (or stopping) of BLV treatment, could reduce long-term disease burden, would enable safer treatments and also reduce treatment costs. Within the proposed systematic, unbiased study the investigators follow a broad screening for biomarkers that may be suitable to discriminate in a first step between patients that will experience a virological relapse (HDV RNA above 1000 IU/ml) after discontinuation of treatment and those without. The investigators plan to include 20 patients in this study. These patients have to have received BLV treatment for at least 48 weeks and have to show HDV-RNA levels below 100 IU/ml in two repeated tests plus one test at screening, for at least 24 weeks while still being on treatment. Treatment will be stopped with the beginning of the study and patients will be followed for 48 weeks. It is expected that up to 14 patients will maintain HDV-RNA control (HDV-RNA below 1000 IU/ml). The other patients are expected to experience a virological relapse. Treating physicians should consider to re-initiate BLV at HDV-RNA levels of above 1000 IU/ml. The aim of the study is to identify biomarkers that are associated with maintained virological response and could therefore be further investigated as predictive markers for treatment response.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERStop Treatment with Bulevertide in patients with compensated liver disease and chronic HDV infectionStop Treatment with Bulevertide in patients with compensated liver disease and chronic HDV infection who have been treated for at least 48 weeks and reached HDV RNA below 100 IU/ml for at least 24 weeks.

Timeline

Start date
2024-09-30
Primary completion
2026-06-30
Completion
2026-06-30
First posted
2024-09-19
Last updated
2026-03-03

Locations

5 sites across 2 countries: Germany, Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06603311. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.