search

Active clinical trials for "Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome"

Results 1181-1190 of 1710

A Study to Evaluate the Effect of Boceprevir and Telaprevir on Dolutegravir Pharmacokinetics in...

InfectionHuman Immunodeficiency Virus

Dolutegravir (DTG, GSK1349572) is an integrase inhibitor that is currently in Phase 3 clinical development for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Co-infection with Hepatitis C (HCV) is common in HIV-infected subjects therefore it is expected that DTG will be coadministered with treatments for HCV. Boceprevir (BCV) and Telaprevir (TVR) are protease inhibitors for the treatment of HCV that were recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration/European Medicines Agency (FDA/EMA) and have rapidly been adopted to "standard of care" in combination with pegylated interferon and ribavarin. This is a single-center, open-label, two-cohort, two-period, one-way, study in healthy adult subjects. A total of approximately 32 subjects will be enrolled, in order to obtain 24 evaluable subjects (12 per cohort). In the first treatment period, all subjects will receive DTG 50 mg once daily for 5 days (treatment A). In period 2, subjects will receive DTG 50 mg once daily plus either BCV 800 mg q8h (treatment B) for 10 days or TVR 750 mg q8h (treatment C) for 10 days. There will be no washout between treatments. Safety evaluations and serial PK samples will be collected during each treatment period. Subjects will have a screening visit within 30 days prior to the first dose of study drug, two treatment periods, and a follow-up visit 7-14 days after the last dose of study drug. This study will be conducted at one center in the US, with healthy adult male and female subjects.

Completed26 enrollment criteria

Building on Needle Exchange to Optimize Prevention & Treatment

Intravenous Drug UsageHIV/AIDS

There are several biomedical interventions that can help people who inject drugs (particularly those with or at risk for HIV), but these services often do not get to the people most in need. In this project investigators propose to determine if delivery of these services to PWID by an integrated care van that is linked to a mobile syringe service program improves clinical outcomes, is feasible and sustainable, and is cost-effective.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

The Intensified Treatment Monitoring Strategy to Prevent Accumulation of Drug Resistance (ITREMA)...

HIV/AIDS

The ITREMA trial is an open-label randomized controlled trial (RCT) in which HIV-1 infected patients initiating first-line ART and already on first-line ART will be enrolled. Enrollment will continue until 600 patients have been randomized. Patients initiating ART will be randomized after six months of ART and patients already on ART will be randomized at 6 months after the last viral load measurement. Patients in both arms will receive study visits every three months for a total follow-up duration of 18 months after randomization to either of two study arms. The control arm will receive standard of care HIV-1 treatment monitoring during first-line ART in accordance with South African National Department of Health (NDoH) guidelines. The intervention arm will receive intensified treatment monitoring during first-line ART according to the treatment monitoring strategy under investigation.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of DMPA With HIV PrEP

HIV/AIDSContraception

This study is a biphasic steady state pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic study of TFV and FTC in healthy women comparing the drug levels and activity in the absence (first phase) and then the presence (second phase) of DMPA. The investigators will recruit 12 healthy women aged 18-45 who are HIV-negative and at low risk for acquiring HIV.

Completed25 enrollment criteria

Relative Mitochondrial Toxicity of Tenofovir Alafenamide (TAF) vs. Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate...

HIV/AIDSAntiviral Toxicity2 more

Increased comorbidities such as cardiovascular disease (CVD), are emerging problems in HIV infection but the mechanisms are unclear. Understanding how antiretrovirals can minimize morbidity in treated HIV infection is a research priority. Nucleoside/nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) are included in all HIV treatment regimens. Tenofovir (TFV) disoproxil fumarate (TDF) has been associated with an increased risk of nephrotoxicity and bone disease compared with other NRTIs. Tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) is an oral prodrug of TFV, but is more stable in plasma as compared with TDF and lower plasma levels of TFV are thought to lead to the favorable safety profile of TAF. Mitochondrial dysfunction has a key role in HIV pathogenesis and may be the common denominator that drives pathogenesis of several comorbidities. Despite the better safety profile of newer (such as TDF) compared to older NRTIs, there are concerns for the potential for longer term toxicity of NRTIs since the exact cellular effects of NRTIs remain unclear. It is unknown whether a four-fold increase in intracellular drug levels seen in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) with TAF may increase toxicity in mitochondria. Better understanding of these effects could provide insights into mechanisms of HIV pathogenesis and selection of NRTIs that improve morbidity in chronic HIV infection. Hypothesis: Despite higher intracellular levels, TAF has minimal mitochondrial toxicity compared to TDF in vivo. This research will explore the relative mitochondrial toxicity of newer NRTIs (TAF, TDF) as a possible mechanism for differential NTRI-related toxicities. These data will allow selection of NRTIs that may improve morbidity in chronic treated HIV infection. Towards this aim, the investigators will use a robust experimental approach to study NRTI-related mitochondrial dysfunction using novel methods, human cell lines and PBMC. Our specific aims are: Aim 1: To evaluate the relative in vitro effects of TAF and TDF compared to an older NRTI (ddC) on 5 independent measures of mitochondrial function in the human cell line HepG2 and PBMC. Aim 2: To explore in vivo whether there is increased mitochondrial dysfunction with the use of TAF vs. TDF in chronic treated HIV infection. The investigators anticipate that the proposed experimental approach will set the basis for future large scale studies to directly compare subtle potential mitochondrial toxicities of newer NRTIs in large HIV cohorts.

Completed45 enrollment criteria

Traditional Healers as Adherence Partners for Persons Living With HIV in Rural Mozambique

HIV/AIDS

The overall goal of this project is to adapt and assess the impact of a traditional healer training program/intervention on the adherence, retention, and viral load of HIV infected patients newly initiated on anti-retroviral therapy in rural Mozambique.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Home Link: Post Hospital Care to Reduce HIV Mortality in South Africa

HIV/AIDS

Background: This is a pilot randomized clinical trial (RCT) to demonstrate the feasibility and acceptability of a structural and behavioral intervention to reduce mortality following hospital discharge for people with HIV (PWH) in South Africa. Investigators' prior study showed that among 121 PWH discharged, 54% were readmitted and 26% had died by six months following discharge. In the prior study, investigators identified that missing clinic visits after discharge was associated with death. Here investigators are seeking to overcome key barriers in piloting a home-based post-hospital care intervention. Investigators' approach is informed by a conceptual model of key barriers to the care transition along with a behavioral explanatory model, the Behavioral Model for Vulnerable Populations. The overarching goal of this study is to tailor and pilot the intervention that shifts initial post-discharge care from the out-patient clinic to the home and provides patient-centered counseling (Home Link intervention). For the intervention to prove effective it will need to substantially reduce post-discharge mortality. Specifically, in the Home Link intervention, a team will conduct home visits to (1) provide a structured clinical assessment; (2) reconcile medications, (3) provide psychosocial support through patient-centered counseling, and (4) assess home needs (food security). These visits will start one week after discharge and be repeated every two weeks until the participant is stabilized and ready to initiate lower intensity clinic-based services or three months have elapsed. Aims: The aims of the study are to pilot a randomized clinical trial of home delivery of health services during the post-hospital period for PWH. Methods: This project is a pilot randomized clinical trial (RCT) to refine and test the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of the HomeLink intervention. At the conclusion of the R34 grant period investigators will have a protocol and procedural manual ready for a full RCT powered for effectiveness. Significance: The proposed study is consistent with NIH HIV/AIDS highest priority research and the South African National Strategic Plan on HIV, tuberculosis (TB), and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) 2017-2022. The research addresses the HIV/AIDS Research Priority of "retention and engagement in these services, and achievement and maintenance of optimal prevention and treatment responses."

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Biomarkers for Event-driven PrEP Adherence

Human Immunodeficiency Virus

This study aims to recruit 20 participants who will take the combination anti-HIV drug tenofovir+emtricitabine (TDF/FTC) at specified times. Participants will then provide biologic samples for the measurement of anti-retroviral drug concentrations in various body compartment sites. Participants will be involved in the study for up to 24 weeks.

Completed21 enrollment criteria

Smoking Cessation Pilot for People Living With HIV (PLWH)

Smoking CessationSmoking8 more

The overall goal of this pilot study is to evaluate the feasibility of the Lumme smartphone app for smoking cessation in people living with HIV (PLWH) and evaluate its effect on smoking cessation. Mobile health (mHealth) technology can be used for achieving health equity in vulnerable groups because it is a widely available and relatively inexpensive tool for health behavior change and can be adapted to meet the needs of its end-users. Therefore, a mHealth intervention such as the Lumme App proposed through this study is timely, relevant, scalable and likely to improve health outcomes in PLWH who smoke.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

HIV Oral Testing Infographic Experiment

HIV/AIDS

Premised on the National AIDS Strategy's focus on identifying new HIV infections through increased HIV testing, the purpose of this formative pilot study is to develop and test an integrated HIV self-testing strategy that utilizes a simplicity-model approach to HIV self-testing in emerging adult sexual minority men of color.

Completed5 enrollment criteria
1...118119120...171

Need Help? Contact our team!


We'll reach out to this number within 24 hrs