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NCT06439342
The main aim of this study is to learn how safe maribavir is in Chinese adults who have undergone hematopoietic stem cell or organ transplantation and have a cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection and how well they tolerate treatment with maribavir. Other aims are to see how effective maribavir is in treating CMV infection and getting rid of the symptoms, the recurrence rate of CMV infection after treatment with maribavir and if the treatment is required again. Researchers will also check for changes (mutations) occurring in the virus which may cause treatment with maribavir to no longer work well or to not work at all (resistance to maribavir). The participants will be treated with maribavir for 8 weeks. During the study, participants will visit their study clinic 18 times.
NCT06615921
The main aim of this study is to check how effective the treatment with Maribavir has been to remove the CMV viruses from the blood of an adult person with CMV infection after a transplant. Other aims are to learn more about how maribavir is used in normal clinical routine, study the profiles of adults treated with maribavir, and what other treatments have been given, and describe healthcare resources used for CMV management. Only data already available in the medical records of the participants will be reviewed and collected during this study.
NCT06793124
Observational, single-center, non-pharmacological, prospective study of adult patients affected by Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) with an ongoing disease exacerbation requiring hospitalization
NCT03486834
This study evaluated the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of the cytomegalovirus (CMV) vaccine (V160) administered in a 2-dose or 3-dose regimen to healthy seronegative women 16 to 35 years of age. Participants received blinded V160 on Day 1, Month 2, and Month 6 (3-dose regimen), V160 on Day 1 and Month 6 and placebo at Month 2 (2-dose regimen), or placebo on Day 1, Month 2, and Month 6, and were followed to approximately Month 24. The primary hypothesis of the study was that administration of a 3-dose regimen of V160 will reduce the incidence of primary CMV infection compared to placebo.
NCT02927067
This study is about treatment options for cytomegalovirus infections in people who have received stem cell transplants. The main aim of the study is to check if the cytomegalovirus infection can no longer be detected after treatment with marivabir or valganciclovir. Participants will take 2 tablets of marivabir or valganciclovir and 2 tablets of placebo twice a day for 8 weeks. A placebo will look like marivabir or valganciclovir but will not have any medicine in it. After treatment, each participant will be followed up for up to 12 weeks. Participants will visit their study clinic up to 18 times during the study.
NCT02606266
Congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is the leading cause of non-genetic neurosensory deafness and affects 0.5 to 1% of births. Twenty to thirty per cent of children will develop deafness, some of whom will progress gradually to profound bilateral deafness. No curative treatment is currently offered for this deterioration in hearing and management involves the use of a hearing aid or cochlear implant. Many studies describe the utility of antiviral treatment on the course of the deafness. These mostly involve neonates with multi-system symptomatic forms of the infection who have been given 6 weeks of ganciclovir possibly switched to valganciclovir, which has shown benefit in stabilising auditory loss, or even improvement.