Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Objective: Determine if maximum doses of rosuvastatin are safe in patients infected with hepatitis C and if the so called pleiotropic effects of rosuvastatin cause a decrease in the HCV viral load.
Primary study parameters: 1. to which extend causes rosuvastatin serious side effects like rhabdomyolysis and hepatotoxicity in patients chronically infected with hepatitis C? 2. does treatment with rosuvastatin in HCV infected patients lead to lower HCV-RNA viral load? 3. Is a decrease in LDL correlated to a decrease in HCV-RNA load?
Full description
Study design: it's a pilot study in which the patients form their own control group. A total of 10 patients will be included. To evaluate the effect of maximum doses of rosuvastatin on liver function and side effects, first 2 patients will be treated and evaluated. If they experience no serious adverse events then a further 8 patients will be included. The dose of rosuvastatin will be increased over a period of 4 weeks.
Intervention: based on experience in treating dyslipidemia, gradually increasing the dose of rosuvastatin diminishes the experienced side effects and decreases the chances of developing hepatotoxicity. Therefore in this study we chose to increase the dose (see flowchart). Patients will start with 5 mg a day wich will be increased after 1 week to 10 mg per day. After the second week of therapy a further increase to 20 mg per day is executed. This dose will be given for another 2 weeks. At week 4 of treatment a further increase to 40 mg is done.
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal