HPV Vaccine Effectiveness Study in Rwandan Women Living With HIV
Cervical CancerHuman Papilloma Virus2 moreOur study will assess and measure population effectiveness of prophylactic HPV vaccine in reducing cervical, anal, and/or oral prevalent and 6-month persistent infections among HPV-vaccinated and 757 HPV-unvaccinated Rwandan WLWH aged 18-26 years. Additional objectives include the quantification & examination of long-term antibody (into young adulthood) responses to HPV vaccination and to validate the performance (e.g., sensitivity and specificity) of a low-cost, POC (point-of-care) anti-HPV16 antibody test to determine/confirm HPV vaccination status. The findings for this study will provide necessary evidence regarding the long-term protection afforded by HPV vaccination in WLWH living in SSA, who are at the greatest risk of HPV-related cancers.
Harm Reduction in HIV Primary Care for PLWH Who Use Drugs
Human Immunodeficiency VirusSubstance Use2 morePeople living with HIV (PLWH) who use drugs experience significant health disparities including lower rates of retention in HIV care and higher rates of unsuppressed viral load, resulting in secondary infections and increased mortality. The proposed study will used mixed methods to explore (a) the relationship between healthcare providers' attitudes towards working with PLWH who use drugs and providers' acceptance and practice of structural and relational harm reduction; (b) the degree to which relational harm reduction moderates the effect of intersectional stigma experienced in healthcare settings on patients' perceptions of their relationship with providers; (c) the degree to which structural HR moderates the relationship between the patient-provider relationship and clinical outcomes, and (d) whether patient-perceived HR approaches to care are directly associated with HIV clinical outcomes. The study will also use these findings to inform the development and pre-testing of an intervention to operationalize harm reduction in HIV clinical settings, using stakeholder-engaged and human-centered design approaches, presenting a novel path to reducing HIV health inequities for PLWH who use drugs.
Outcomes of HIV Infected Individuals After Ten Years on Antiretroviral Treatment
HIV/AIDSStudy Title: Outcomes of HIV infected individuals after ten years on antiretroviral treatment Short Title/Study ID: ALT cohort Protocol Version and Date: Version 1.0 June 2013 Clinical Phase: NA Methodology: Prospective observational study Study Duration: 01 January 2014- 30th June 2025 Study Centre(s): Single centre (Infectious Diseases Institute, Kampala, Uganda) Number of Subjects: Enrollment of 1,000 study participants. All patients discharged from the IDI Research cohort (10 years of follow up on ART) will be offered to participate in the study. Additional patients with similar characteristics will be enrolled from he clinic Diagnosis and Main Inclusion Criteria: HIV patients above 18 years and in their 10th year of ART Main Exclusion Criteria: ART started outside IDI Study Product, Dose, Route, Regimen: ART will be provided according to standard of care at IDI and according to the WHO and Ugandan guidelines Duration of follow up: 10 years Reference therapy, Dose, Route, Regimen: Not applicable Recruitment Schedule: 1 January 2014- 30 June 2015 Statistical Methodology: Time to event analysis (end of treatment, failure, death, switch, occurrence of drug toxicities) including Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox regression will be performed. Endpoints will be correlated with characteristics at ART start and at study enrollment. Possible confounding variables, if available, will be considered. GCP Statement: This study will be conducted in compliance with the protocol, the current version of the Declaration of Helsinki, and ICH-GCP as well as all national legal and regulatory requirements.
Evaluating the Pharmacokinetics, Feasibility, Acceptability, and Safety of Oral Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis...
HIV InfectionsThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the pharmacokinetics, feasibility, acceptability, and safety of a fixed-dose combination of emtricitabine and tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (FTC/TDF) as oral daily pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to prevent HIV during pregnancy and postpartum in adolescents and young women and their infants.
Nice Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Cohort
Human Immunodeficiency VirusHistorically, the database on the HIV was organized within the framework of the medico-economic file of the human immunodeficiency (DMI-2), introduced jointly by the Direction of Hospitals (Mission AIDS) and the INSERM at the end of the 80s. Today this database is fed via the computerized medical record NADIS. Most part of the research works on the theme of the HIV take support on this database (DAD, EuroAIDS, Neuradapt).
Evaluating the Safety and Immunogenicity of HIV-1 BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140 With TLR Agonist and/or...
HIV InfectionsThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of HIV-1 BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140 with TLR agonist and/or alum adjuvants in healthy, HIV-uninfected adults.
Increasing PrEP Use in High-Risk Social Networks of African-American MSM in Underserved Low-Risk...
Human Immunodeficiency VirusThis study evaluates the use of a social-network approach to encourage African-American men who have sex with men (AAMSM) to adopt pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to prevent HIV infection. Thirty-six networks of AAMSM will be recruited in Milwaukee, WI, and Cleveland, OH. Half of these networks will have their leaders trained to endorse PrEP to their social network members, and the other half will be given brief HIV prevention counseling.
Netherlands Cohort Study on Acute HIV Infection
Acute HIV InfectionInvestigation of the size, variability and localization of the (pro) viral reservoir and the properties of HIV-specific immune response related to "post-treatment viral remission' achievement and / or duration. In addition we will study the factors that determine latency in the different host cells, their sensitivity to induction of replication competent virus by various agents and the potential application of these agents in "post-treatment viral remission". This all will be studied in patients included during acute phase of the infection who start antiretroviral therapy immediately upon diagnosis.
HCV Reinfection in in HIV/HCV-coinfected Patients Achieving SVR by Antiviral Therapy
Hepatitis C Virus InfectionHepatitis C Virus Infection2 moreChronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection remains a health burden in people living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Interferon (IFN)-based therapy is the treatment of choice for HCV infection for HIV coinfected patients in earlier years. However, the treatment responses are far from ideal and the treatment-emergent adverse events (AEs) are frequently encountered. Based on the excellent efficacy and safety, IFN-free direct acting antivirals (DAAs) have been the mainstay of therapy for HCV. Furthermore, the world health organization (WHO) has set the goal of global HCV elimination by 2030. The microelimination of HCV among HIV/HCV-coinfected patients is also listed as the prioritized target by WHO. Although the overall treatment response has improved dramatically during the past 5-10 years, several studies have indicated the HIV/HCV-coinfected patients had high risks of reinfection following successful antiviral treatment. The risk of HCV reinfection was reported to be 24.6% among HIV-positive men who have sex with men (MSM) in Austria, German, France and the United Kingdom who attained sustained virologic response (SVR) by IFN-based therapy. Two recent studies from Canada showed that the incidence of HCV reinfection in HIV-positive patients was higher that HIV-negative patients (3.44 vs. 1.13 per 100 person-year; 2.56 vs. 1.12 per 100 person-year). In Taiwan, 14.1% of the HIV-positive patients had HCV reinfection following treatment-induced or spontaneous viral clearance, resulting an incidence of 8.2 per 100 person-year with a total of 218.3 person-years of follow-up for these patients. Because data regarding to the HCV reinfection in HIV-positive patients are still limited, where a more comprehensive assessment of HCV reinfection is important based on the perspectives of HCV microelimination among HIV-positive patients in Taiwan, the investigators thus aim to conduct a long-term, large-scale cohort study to assess the risk of HCV reinfection in HIV-positive patients achieving SVR after IFN-based or IFN-free therapies, and to assess the factors associated with different risks of reinfection in these patients.
Integrated Navigation Services for Treatment Adherence, Counseling, and Research
HIV Infection PrimaryThe goal of this research is to determine whether a Community Health Worker (CHW) intervention including a mobile telehealth (M-Health) component can help achieve long term viral suppression among Black people with poorly controlled HIV.