Title

Q-Trial in Patients With Hepatitis C
A Phase 1 Study of Quercetin in Patients With Hepatitis C
  • Phase

    Phase 1
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Intervention/Treatment

    quercetin ...
  • Study Participants

    34
The goal of this study is to translate laboratory findings that Quercetin, a bioflavonoid, is safe and has antiviral activity in people with hepatitis C.
Chronic hepatitis C (HCV) is a serious chronic condition in the United States affecting millions of people and is the cause of rates of hepatocellular carcinoma recently doubling in the US. Treatment of hepatitis C is proven to be an effective secondary prevention of liver cancer. Current standard antiviral treatments exclude 70-80% of hepatitis C patients from therapies due to intolerable side effects. Our laboratory efforts identified a potential novel approach to hepatitis C treatment and hepatocellular carcinoma prevention with Quercetin, a heat shock protein inhibitor.

This is a Phase I study evaluating the safety and tolerability of Quercetin in hepatitis C patients who have contraindications to standard antiviral treatment (both treatment naïve patients who decline standard therapy, patients who previously had standard treatments with relapse, as well as those who had intolerable side effects previously). The investigators recently demonstrated that the flavonoid Quercetin inhibits hepatitis C viral production in tissue culture, at least partially through its inhibition of heat shock protein expression. This represents a novel mechanism for treating hepatitis C infection. Quercetin also has low toxicity. These promising characteristics motivate the proposed Phase I study. Patients will be recruited through the UCLA Pfleger Liver Institute and treated on an outpatient basis. Toxicity will be closely monitored and reported. Viral load response will be evaluated as a secondary endpoint. The anticipated total number of patients enrolled in the trial will be 20. All patients will be followed for 8 months after taking this first dose of study medication. Patients exhibiting a viral load response will have extended follow-up, ranging from a total follow-up of 12-24 months, to determine persistence of this response.
Study Started
Jul 31
2011
Primary Completion
Jun 30
2014
Study Completion
Jun 30
2014
Last Update
Mar 20
2015
Estimate

Dietary Supplement Quercetin

Bioflavonoid

Quercetin Experimental

Quercetin is a bioflavonoid.

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

All participants will have detectable HCV RNA in serum; stable viral load within the previous year (no fluctuation > 2 log scale).
All participants are either treatment-naïve and unwilling to be treated with standard HCV therapies, or were not able to tolerate hepatitis C antiviral due to side effects and completed treatment more than 6 months prior to enrollment into our trial.
Age range will be from 18-65 years old
ECOG performance status <2 (Karnofsky >60%)
Life expectancy of greater than 12 months

Participants must have:

leukocytes >3,000/mcL
absolute neutrophil count >1,500/mm(3)
hemoglobin >13 or >12 g/dL for men/women
platelets >125,000 K/mm(3)
total bilirubin <1.5 g/dL
AST(SGOT)/ALT(SGPT) <10 X institutional upper limit of normal
Albumin >3.4g/dL
INR <1.2
Alpha Feto-protein <50 ng/mL
creatinine within normal institutional limits OR
creatinine clearance >60 mL/min/1.73 m2 for participants with creatinine levels above institutional normal.
All participants must exhibit the ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document.

Exclusion Criteria:

Participants who are currently on interferon +/- ribavirin or any other anti-viral therapies are excluded from our study. Participants who have previously been treated with hepatitis C antiviral therapy must have recovered from any adverse events due to the agent(s) administered. In addition, their last antiviral therapy must be more than six months prior to their enrollment in our study
Participants may not be receiving any other investigational agents
Participants with decompensated liver disease or cirrhosis will be excluded from this trial
History of allergic reactions attributed to compounds of similar chemical or biologic composition to Quercetin or any bioflavonoid agent
According to a monogram published by the Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database, drug interactions with Quercetin have been reported to occur with quinolone antibiotics and inhibition of p-glycoprotein or various cytochrome P450 enzymes including CYP3A4/ CYP2C8/ CYP2C9/ CYP2D6. Quercetin interactions with drugs can be categorized into (1) moderate interaction to be avoided based on healthy volunteer studies and (2) moderate interaction to be monitored closely based on in vitro studies demonstrating potential theoretical reduced elimination and increased effects. Screening will be performed prior to treatment.
Participants with concurrent illness including but not limited to ongoing or active infection, symptomatic congestive heart failure, unstable angina pectoris, untreated/active cardiac arrhythmia, psychiatric illness, active moderate alcohol use, or any social situation that would limit compliance with study protocol will be excluded from our study.
In addition, participants with any other known hepatitis etiologies (hepatitis B co-infection, hemochromatosis, alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, Wilson Disease, autoimmune hepatitis, alcohol, drug, obesity induced liver disease); or those with hepatocellular carcinoma will be excluded from this study.
Pregnant women are excluded from this study.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive subjects are excluded from our study.
In addition to renal and hepatic laboratory requirements listed above, renal and liver transplant recipients will be excluded from our study.
No Results Posted