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The purpose of this study is to compare the safety, tolerability and effectiveness of 12 weeks of treatment with telbivudine 600 mg daily plus tenofovir DF 300 mg once daily (QD) taken together versus tenofovir DF 300 mg once daily (QD) or versus telbivudine 600 mg monotherapy daily (QD). This is an open-labeled, active controlled, viral kinetics study which means the subjects and study doctor will know what study drug subjects have been assigned. This study is open to male and female subjects, <40 years of age, who have been infected with HBV for at least 6 months and have not received oral treatment for HBV.
Full description
The primary goal of therapy for chronic hepatitis B (CHB) is suppression of viral replication. Long-term suppression of serum HBV DNA is likely to reduce progression to cirrhosis and hepatic decompensation and decrease the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma. Conventional treatment of chronic hepatitis B is limited by low rates of sustained hepatitis B virus DNA suppression and hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) seroconversion, increasing rates of drug resistance to the oral agents, and poor tolerability of interferon.
Currently, several nucleoside/nucleotide analogues are available for treatment of CHB. Typically, treatment is continued indefinitely since discontinuation is usually associated with relapse . However, the safety implications related to long term treatment are still unknown.
Previously published studies using combinations (peginterferon alpha-2a + lamivudine) (Marcellin 2004; Lau 2005; Janssen 2005) have shown combinations to be more potent in HBeAg loss at the end of dosing, than either agent used as monotherapy; off-treatment differences, however, did not persist. There are no treatment paradigms as yet of combination therapy with two nucleoside analogues for use in treatment-naive patients.
In summary, there is an unmet need for improved anti-HBV therapy and there are still several controversies such as treatment options, potential role of combination therapy versus monotherapy and optimal duration of therapy, among others. Clinical trials are underway to answer some of these questions. This study aims to assess whether or not combination therapy with telbuvudine and tenofovir DF has superior antiviral efficacy when compared to tenofovir DF or telbuvidine monotherapy. The study will also determine the safety of the combination of telbivudine and tenofovir disoproxil fumarate in patients with chronic hepatitis B. Patients in the immunotolerant phase of CHB will be include in the study. This phase is characterized for high viremia and normal transaminases. Since these patients are not considered as candidates for CHB therapy according to international guidelines (Lok et al 2007), treatment discontinuation after 12 weeks does not raise any unethical implications.
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Primary objectives:
The primary objective of this study is to characterize the reduction in HBV DNA level from Baseline to week 12 of telbivudine plus tenofovir DF combination therapy versus telbivudine or tenofovir DF monotherapy.
Secondary objectives:
Secondary objectives of the study include describing the following for telbivudine plus tenofovir DF combination therapy versus telbivudine or tenofovir DF monotherapy:
Exploratory objectives:
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Inclusion criteria
Patients must meet all of the following inclusion criteria at screening to be eligible for participation in this study.
Exclusion criteria
Patients will be excluded from the study for any of the criteria:
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15 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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