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Active clinical trials for "Papillomavirus Infections"

Results 61-70 of 368

HPV Vaccination in HIV Infected and HIV Uninfected Adolescents in Eswatini

HPV InfectionHiv1 more

This is a multi-site, open-label non-inferiority study of the 9vHPV vaccine among a population of children, adolescents and young women living with HIV in Eswatini. This protocol seeks to assess immunogenicity of a two-dose 9vHPV vaccine regimen among girls and boys (9-14 years) and young women (15-26 years) living with HIV on antiretroviral therapy versus a three-dose 9vHPV vaccine regimen among HIV uninfected young women (15-26 years) in Eswatini. The secondary objectives include examining the safety profiles of the two-dose 9vHPV regimen in those living with HIV and the three-dose 9vHPV regimen in HIV-uninfected young women, as well as measuring the completion of the vaccination series among those living with HIV and those who are not infected with HIV.

Active24 enrollment criteria

Adding Male Single Dose HPV Vaccination to Female HPV Vaccination in Tanzania

HPV InfectionVaccine Preventable Disease

Add-Vacc is an unblinded cluster-randomised trial (CRT) with two arms: (i) the national HPV vaccination programme (girls aged ~14 years, control arm) and (ii) the national programme plus single-dose male HPV vaccination given to a multi-year cohort of boys (intervention arm). The CRT will be conducted in 26 communities/clusters (13 per arm) in northern Tanzania. Boys aged 14 to 18 years in the intervention arm will receive one dose of the 4-valent HPV vaccine (Gardasil®) that protects against HPV 6, 11, 16, and 18. Population genital HPV prevalence in 18 to 21-year-olds will be compared between intervention clusters (female and male vaccination) and control clusters (female vaccination only) at 3 years after the intervention. Blood sampling for immune responses and adverse event data collection will be performed in a subset of 200 male subjects in selected intervention clusters.

Active12 enrollment criteria

Vaccination Against Human Papillomavirus (HPV) With the 9-valent Vaccine in HIV-positive Women (the...

HPV - Anogenital Human Papilloma Virus InfectionHIV Infections

Phase IV prospective study measuring the immunogenicity (neutralizing antibody titles against each HPV vaccine genotype) of the 9-valent vaccine against HPV (Gardasil9®Merck) in HIV-positive women aged 15-40 years with fully suppressed HIV viremia on combined antiretroviral therapy. After a first open phase evaluating tolerability of Gardasil9 (from June 2018 to December 2018), an amendment was introduced to randomize women between two different doses schedules: in the first schedule (ARM A), women will receive 2 doses at time 0 and 6 months and a third dose between 18-48 months if their antibody levels are insufficient; the second schedule (ARM B) will be 3 doses at 0, 2 and 6 months. Primary outcome is the non-inferiority of the rate of seroconversion against each HPV vaccine genotypes in women seronegative at baseline after either 2 or 3 doses of vaccination (month 7). Secondary outcomes are rate of seroconversion after 3 doses if they have received a third dose, completion of vaccine schedule, vaccine safety, antibody titles, and induction of cellular immunity against HPV contained in the vaccine, incidence of cervical HPV infection and incidence of abnormal cytology after vaccination. The safety of the vaccination (local or systemic reaction and impact on HIV viral control and immunodeficiency level) will be assessed. The cellular immune response will be assessed in a subgroup of patients.

Active11 enrollment criteria

The Immunogenicity and Safety of the Vaccination of Human Papillomavirus Vaccine and Measles-Mumps-Rubella...

Human Papilloma Virus Infection Type 16Human Papilloma Virus Infection Type 183 more

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the immunogenicity and safety of Recombinant Human Papillomavirus Bivalent (Types 16,18) Vaccine (Escherichia coli) (HPV)and Measles Mumps and Rubella Combined Vaccine, Live(MMR)

Active22 enrollment criteria

The Organ Transplant Recipient HPV and Skin Cancer Study

Solid Organ Transplant RecipientSkin Cancer5 more

Solid organ transplant recipients (OTRs) receive lifelong immunosuppressive therapy, which puts them at increased risk of cutaneous and mucosal cancers. In particular, OTRs have increased risk of skin cancer and cancers caused by human papillomavirus (HPV), including cervical cancer and oropharyngeal cancer. There is currently limited knowledge on risk factors for HPV infection and skin cancer in OTRs, and limited knowledge on the natural history of HPV infection and cervical neoplasia in OTRs compared with immunocompetent controls. With a continuously increasing number of OTRs, there is a growing need to improve our understanding of the long-term reactions to immunosuppression. The overall aim of this study is to investigate long term effects of immunosuppression on cutaneous and mucosal epithelium in Danish OTRs, including the risk of skin dysplasia and skin cancer, cervical and oral HPV infection and HPV-related dysplasia and cancer in OTRs. This study will be designed as a prospective observational cohort study based on clinical data and data from nationwide Danish registries. A total of 600 female OTRs, 600 male OTRs and 600 female controls will be included from Danish dermatology departments. The study aims to provide knowledge relevant for improving prevention of skin- and HPV-related cancers in OTRs, including personalized screening recommendations according to individual patient risk.

Recruiting13 enrollment criteria

A Study to Evaluate the Efficacy, Safety, and Immunogenicity of SCT1000 in Healthy Women Aged 18-45...

HPV InfectioNHPV-Related Carcinoma

A total of 18000 healthy women aged 18-45 years old were divided into three age groups: 18-26 years old, 27-35 years old, and 36-45 years old. The experimental group and the placebo group were randomly assigned in a ratio of 1:1. All subjects enrolled in the upper arm deltoid muscle were injected with 3 doses of test vaccine or placebo according to the 0, 2, and 6 months immunization program.

Active26 enrollment criteria

A Basket Study of Customized Autologous TCR-T Cell Therapies in Patients With Locally Advanced (Unresectable)...

Head and Neck CancerCervical Cancer19 more

TScan Therapeutics is developing cellular therapies across multiple solid tumors in which autologous participant-derived T cells are engineered to express a T cell receptor that recognizes cancer-associated antigens presented on specific Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) molecules. This is a multi-center, non-randomized, multi-arm, open-label, basket study evaluating the safety and preliminary efficacy of single and repeat dose regimens of TCR'Ts as monotherapies and as T-Plex combinations after lymphodepleting chemotherapy in participants with locally advanced, metastatic solid tumors disease.

Not yet recruiting19 enrollment criteria

Treatment of HPV Infection in Perimenopausal and Postmenopausal Women

HPV Infection

A randomized controlled study was conducted to determine the effects of vaginal estrogen and human interferon alpha 2b vaginal effervescent capsules on vaginal microecology in perimenopausal and postmenopausal women. To determine whether there is a synergistic effect between the two in the treatment of HPV infection in perimenopausal and postmenopausal women. To observe the effects of two drugs alone and combined on the vaginal immune environment of patients.

Not yet recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Clinical Correlation Between Self-collected and Physician-collected HPV Screening Kits

HPV InfectionCervical Cancer

The objective of this study is to validate the of the Evalyn®Brush via self-collection to the standard clinician-collected technique using the BD SurePath™ collection vial and Rovers CombiBrush for detection of Human Papillomavirus (HPV). This study will validate the sensitivity and specificity of the Evalyn Brush with the future goal of making this testing approach available for self-collection in the future.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Single-Dose HPV Vaccination for the Prevention of Cervical Cancer in Young Adult Women in Costa...

Cervical CarcinomaHuman Papillomavirus Infection

This phase IV trial tests whether a single dose of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine works in preventing cervical cancer in young women in Costa Rica. Human papilloma viruses, called HPV, are a group of viruses that very frequently cause infection in both men and women, mainly in the genital organs. There are many types of HPV, and some can cause cancer. The World Health Organization recommends a two-dose schedule for adolescents 9-14 and three doses for individuals 15 years old or older. This study examines whether a single dose of HPV vaccine can reduce the frequency with which women between ages 18-30 become infected with HPV.

Active5 enrollment criteria
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