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Chronic hepatitis B (CHB) infection remains an important public health with more than 240 million people chronically infected despite the existence of an effective vaccine. Cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are major complications of CHB infection and are responsible for more than 600,000 deaths each year. These complications are strongly related to the function of the immune system. Indeed, the persistence of HBV and the progression of liver disease are mainly due to the development of an ineffective immune response to HBV. Therefore, the clinical outcome depends on the complex interaction between HBV replication and adaptive immune responses.
The ultimate goal of antiviral treatments is the elimination of HBsAgHBs and the appearance of anti-HBs antibodies without detectable PCR replication. Current treatments are effective at lowering viral DNA levels, but they are not able to permanently eliminate chronic HBV infection, due to the persistence of cDNA in the nucleus of infected hepatocytes. This therapeutic goal is rarely achieved and new therapeutic approaches are needed. In this sense, Immunotherapy represents a very promising new therapeutic approach that could lead to the cure of chronic HBV infection. Indeed, HBV infection is characterized by a progressive depletion of T lymphocytes which results in a progressive loss of function, associated with a sustained positive regulation of inhibitory control molecules.
Thus, the objective of this study is to define the immune signature and the main control pathways associated with T-cell depletion in patients chronically infected with HBV, by analyzing immune cells isolated from these patients at phenotypic , transcriptional and functional levels
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
For all patients
For patients chronically infected with NUC treatment for more than 6 months:
For chronically infected, untreated patients:
Exclusion criteria
Use of steroids or other immunosuppressive agents that would affect the number and / or function of immune cells in the last 4 weeks
•,Any disease or other major medical disorder or condition that , that, in the judgment of the investigator, would interfere with results of the study (including, but not limited to: cancer, systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis or other autoimmune disease, etc. ...)
Major surgery or traumatic injury (including blood transfusion) in the last 4 weeks
-• Use of an experimental drug in the last 12 weeks
Positive test for Hepatitis C, HIV, Hepatitis D, or Hepatitis A (anti-HAV IgM) at the time of inclusion
Significant acute infection such as influenza or other clinically significant illness in the last 2 weeks
History of drug abuse in the last year
positive pregnancy test for women of childbearing age
Breast-feeding women
Patients presenting:
Note: If a biopsy or a non-invasive test for cirrhosis has never been performed in the patient, then the medical examinations described in b) must be performed during the selection visit.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
François HABERSETZER, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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