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A Study to Test the Efficacy of the HBV Vaccine and to Look at the Prevalence of HBV Infection

The Efficacy of HBV Vaccine Response and Prevalence of Occult HBV Infection in Isolated Anti HBc Between HIV Infected and HIV Un-infected Thai Patients

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00476411
Enrollment
200
Registered
2007-05-22
Start date
2006-12-31
Completion date
2009-12-31
Last updated
2020-07-17

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Hepatitis b Virus

Keywords

isolated HBc, HBV vaccine response, occult HBV in isolated antiHBC compared HIV to non HIV

Brief summary

The prevalence of Hepatitis B core antigen in the Thai population is about 70 %, no data of isolated Hepatitis B core antigen is reported. Hepatitis B core antigen is observed in 10%-20% of individuals from low endemic areas of HBV infection. However, this prevalence of isolated antiHBc would be higher in endemic area of HBV infection. There is conflicting data of occult HBV infection in HIV infected patients. In Thailand, perinatal transmission is the main route of transmission which is different from developed countries. Therefore, isolated antiHBc in Thai people has longer duration than low prevalence regions. Moreover, HBV genotype C and B is common in this region. If the HBV vaccination could eliminate an occult HBV infection in these individuals, the liver related mortality might be reduced. The prevalence and clinical importance of isolated antiHBc in Thai have not been investigated yet. There is also limited data of HBV vaccine response in this setting.

Detailed description

The prevalence of the Hepatitis B core antigen (anti-HBc)in the Thai population is about 70 %. No data of isolated anti-HBc is reported. Anti-HBc antigen is observed in 10%-20% of individuals from low endemic areas of HBV infection. The prevalence of isolated antiHBc antigen is expected to be higher in endemic areas of HBV infection. There is conflicting data of occult HBV infection in HIV-infected patients. In Thailand, perinatal transmission is the main route of HBV transmission, different from developed countries. Therefore, isolated anti-HBc in Thai people has longer duration than low prevalence regions. Moreover, HBV genotype C and B is common in this region. HBV genotype C is correlated with more cirrhosis and hepatoma than genotype B. A study from Taiwan demonstrated that HBV DNA \> 100,000 copies/ml is correlated with cirrhosis and hepatoma. Sustained reduction of HBV replication lowers the risk of hepatoma in HBV related cirrhosis. If the HBV vaccination could eliminate an occult HBV infection in these individuals, the liver related mortality will be reduced. The prevalence and its clinical importance of isolated anti-HBc in the Thai population has not been investigated yet. There is also limited data of HBV vaccine response in this setting.

Interventions

BIOLOGICALHBV vaccine

HBV vaccine 3 doses at month 0, 1, and 6

Sponsors

The HIV Netherlands Australia Thailand Research Collaboration
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* HIV-infected adults followed at HIV-NAT and HIV-NAT affiliated hospitals and Un-infected HIV adults followed at chulalongkorn hospital and blood bank * AntiHBc positive without HBsAg and antiHBs * Written inform consent

Exclusion criteria

* Patients receiving, or with an anticipated need to receive, any concomitant medications with the potential to decrease the response to HBV vaccine such as long term steroid user, chemotherapy, cancer

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
HBV DNA in HIV-infected patients presenting with a serological pattern of isolated anti-HBcAg compare to non HIV patients with isolated antiHBc1 year

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
antiHBs titer after 2 month of third dose of HBV vaccine in both 2 groups1 year
liver function test after HAART in HIV patients compare between negative and positive HBV DNA1 year
3TC resistant after 3TC containing HAART in HIV patients with detectable HBV DNA prior treatment1 year

Countries

Thailand

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026