
Boosted Atazanavir and Truvada Given Once-Daily - BATON Study
HIV InfectionsTo determine the safety and efficacy of a simple, once-daily antiretroviral (ARV) regimen consisting of a fixed-dose combination tablet containing Truvada combined with atazanavir boosted with ritonavir in treatment naive patients.

Monitoring Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy in HIV-infected Parents in Thailand
HIV InfectionsThe purpose of this study is to determine if a decision to switch to a subsequent antiretroviral regimen based upon the CD4 cell count rather than the standard switching strategy based on viral load could ensure the same immunological and clinical outcome and preserve future treatment options in AIDS patients

Study of Treatment of Antiretroviral-naive, HIV-1-Infected Patients Comparing Tenofovir Disoproxil...
HIV InfectionsTo compare tenofovir DF plus lamivudine plus efavirenz vs. stavudine plus lamivudine plus efavirenz in the treatment of HIV-1-infected patients who have never taken antiretroviral drugs and have a viral load of less than 400 copies/mL at week 48.

The Switch Study: The Role of Lamivudine/Emtricitabine (3TC/FTC) in Antiretroviral Regimens
HIV InfectionsIn this study the researchers will be enrolling patients who are failing their current antiretroviral regimen who also have resistance to 3TC or FTC. Patients will have their current antiretroviral regimen changed based on resistance testing and also be randomly assigned to either include, or not include 3TC/FTC in this new regimen. The purpose of the research is to investigate whether the change in therapy results in a decrease in the amount of virus particles and an increase in the CD4 cell count. In addition the researchers are investigating the relationship between the existence of resistance and the rate of decrease in viral load, and also to determine if continuing 3TC/FTC (despite being resistant to the medications) has any effect on the rate of decrease of viral load, or effect on CD4 counts.

Feasibility Study of a Once Daily Antiretroviral Regimen in Vietnam (ANRS 1210 VIETAR)
HIV InfectionAccess to care and treatment using antiretroviral drugs will be expanded in Vietnam in the next few years. The ANRS 1210 study is a pilot program to evaluate the feasibility of a simplified antiretroviral treatment using three antiretroviral drugs once a day. The objectives will be to assess the efficacy and the tolerance of this treatment and to better understand the difficulties linked to social and behavioural conditions of patients at different stages during the treatment.

Effect of HIV Protease Inhibitor Drugs on Glucose and Insulin Metabolism
HIV InfectionsThis study examined the effects of two commonly prescribed HIV drugs on the way the body metabolizes glucose, insulin and fat.

CSP #512 - Options in Management With Anti-Retrovirals
AIDSHIV InfectionsThis 'pragmatic' trial is a 2X2 open randomized study of patients in advanced HIV disease who have failed on conventional Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART) regimens including all three classes of anti-HIV drugs. The first randomization will allocate patients to an intended 3-month antiretroviral drug-free period (ARDFP) or No ARDFP. The second randomization will allocate patients to Mega-ART (5+ drugs) or to Standard-ART (up to 4 drugs). The total study duration is 6.5 years with 5 years of intake and 1.5 year (minimum) of follow-up; median duration of patient follow-up is about 4 years. The target sample size is 390 patients and will provide 75% power to detect a 30% reduction in the hazard rate for the primary endpoint with mega-ART. Sixty-four sites will be participating in the trial--24 VA, 19 UK and 21 Canada.

Administration of Growth Hormone to Increase CD4+ Count in Patients Taking Anti-HIV Drugs
HIV InfectionsThis study is designed to evaluate the ability of growth hormone (GH, also known as somatropin) to increase CD4+ cell counts in patients taking anti-HIV drugs. The study is targeted toward patients with low levels of HIV who continue to have low CD4+ cell counts.

A HIV Study Of A Fixed-Dose Combination Tablet In Antiretroviral Experienced Patients
InfectionHuman Immunodeficiency Virus I1 moreThis study is a 48-week study designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a fixed-dose combination tablet administered once-a-day versus the individual tablets administered twice-a-day within 3-drug combination regimens in ART (antiretroviral)-experienced HIV-1 infected patients.

A Study Comparing 4 Doses Of GW810781 Versus Placebo In HIV-Infected Patients
HIV InfectionsThis study will evaluate the drop in viral load over 10 days of treatment with S-1360 versus placebo in HIV-infected patients who have not previously taken anti-HIV medications.