There are about 849 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Uganda. The country of the clinical trial is determined by the location of where the clinical research is being studied. Most studies are often held in multiple locations & countries.
This evaluation will be conducted in ten countries involved in the Catalyzing Pediatric TB Innovation (CaP-TB) project: Cameroon, Cote D'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Tanzania, Uganda, Zimbabwe and India. The CaP-TB project is a project designed to use innovative methods and capacity building to strengthen the health systems of developing countries in terms of pediatric TB case detection, early accurate diagnosis and effective treatment. This project is funded by Unitaid and is implemented by Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation. EGPAF proposes to evaluate the implementation of CaP-TB in up to 450 sites in ten participating countries. This evaluation will assess the effects of CaP-TB innovative interventions on selected service delivery outcomes as compared to routine TB program in a sub-set of project sites in the ten countries.
The EXTEND study is a randomized controlled trial to compare the uptake and acceptability, efficacy, and cost of methods of delivery of an alcohol intervention in reducing unhealthy alcohol use and increasing viral suppression among HIV positive persons in Uganda. The study arms are (a) in-person counseling during 2 quarterly clinic visits plus live booster phone calls every three weeks in the interim (b) in-person counseling during 2 quarterly clinic visits plus tech (choice of SMS or IVR) boosters once to twice weekly in the interim; and (c) standard of care (SOC) control (brief unstructured advice, with a wait-listed intervention).
The lack of data relating to the DDI between ATV and RIF is a major limitation to the use of ATV in patients who require treatment for TB. The VirTUAL Workpackage 2 will explore the necessary dose escalation required to overcome this interaction in non-pregnant HIV-infected adults who are virologically suppressed on bPI-based ART, and who are administered RIF as a study drug, not as part of a full TB treatment regimen. As the specific objective of WP2 is to define the dose of ATV, participants taking an alternative bPI will be transitioned to ATV for the duration of that study. However, to extrapolate the results of this study to special populations such as pregnant and postpartum women, children and adolescents and those with other 'special' characteristics such as obesity (BMI >30 Kg/m2) or malnutrition (BMI <18.5 Kg/m2) we propose to undertake sparse sampling for pharmacokinetic analysis from individuals who require ATV-based ART for their clinical care. Sparse PK data will be obtained opportunistically from participants in the 'special populations' defined above who are receiving ATV as part of their routine clinical care. Subjects will be identified from clinics including the Joint Clinical Research Center (JCRC) and Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI), Kampala, and from sites including Groote Schuur Hospital and Gugulethu Community Health Centre, Cape Town. The ATV/r data from "special populations" will enable validation and refinement of both the PBPK model (WP1) and the pop-PK models (WP4) of the VirTUAL consortium.
Migration is common in rural Africa: in-migrants have higher HIV incidence and prevalence than community residents, but underutilize combined HIV prevention and care services, including voluntary medical male circumcision and antiretroviral therapy, increasing the risks of HIV acquisition and onward transmission. Uptake of combined HIV prevention (CHP) is critical in this vulnerable population. The investigators will conduct a community randomized trial to rapidly identify and link migrants to CHP in rural Uganda; if effective, the intervention could be widely implemented as an important strategy towards HIV epidemic control.
This study aims to identify the aetiology of childhood meningitis in Southwestern Uganda and develop and evaluate new methods for point-of-care diagnosis of childhood meningitis in a low-income setting. A prospective observational study including 600 children aged 0-12 years will be conducted during 1 year in Mbarara, Uganda. We estimate to recruit about 300 children with suspected meningitis (cases), and 300 with non-severe infection age-matched as controls.
A 3-arm randomised controlled trial will be conducted to compare the effectiveness of a new enhanced Child Friendly Space service package with the basic Child Friendly Space service implementation, and to a waitlist control condition, within the West Nile refugee response in Uganda.
Despite effective strategies to reduce periconception HIV transmission, there are few services to support people living with or affected by HIV to use these methods. In particular, there is a lack of safer conception services focused on engaging men living with HIV. Given known gender inequities in childbearing decision-making and HIV risk, it is critical that safer conception services deliver programming that engages men living with HIV and their HIV sero-different partners. The Healthy Families program, based at the ISS Clinic at Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital, offers client-centered safer conception care to help HIV-affected individuals and couples meet reproductive goals. This care supports clients to leverage personal motivations and partner and social supports to overcome structural barriers and use Antiretroviral Therapy (ART), adopt other HIV-prevention strategies, and remain in care. This pilot study (the 'Getting to Zero' study) will assess uptake and experiences of safer conception care among 50 men living with HIV and their HIV sero-different partners. Investigators will also assess men's retention in HIV care and HIV transmission risk to partners and infants. This is a one-year mixed-methods prospective pilot research study, which will use electronic chart review data, longitudinal survey data (from the male index and female partner participant), and qualitative data from in-depth semi-structured interviews to meet study objectives. By demonstrating safer conception uptake and impact on HIV transmission risks to partners and infants, investigators aim to inform HIV and reproductive health policy in Uganda and globally.
Globally, approximately 7.7 million children per year die before the age of 5 years. Infectious diseases account for a large proportion of these deaths, with pneumonia being the leading cause of mortality (2.1 million deaths/year). Most deaths occur in resource-poor settings in Asia and Africa. Oxygen (O2) therapy is essential to support life in these patients. Large gaps remain in the case management of children presenting to African hospitals with respiratory distress, including essential supportive therapies such as supplemental oxygen. In resource-constrained settings, oxygen delivery systems can lead to measurable improvements in survival from childhood pneumonia. A multihospital effectiveness study in Papua New Guinea demonstrated a reduction in mortality from childhood pneumonia from 5.0% to 3.2% (35% reduction in mortality) after implementation of enhanced oxygen delivery system. The investigators propose to investigate a novel strategy for oxygen delivery that could be implemented in remote locations with minimal access to an electrical power supply: solar-powered oxygen (SPO2).
The goal of this study is to evaluate the effect of a combination intervention on long-term HIV viral load (VL) suppression among HIV-infected adolescents and young adults 15-24 years of age. The study will take place in 28 rural HIV clinics in western Kenya and southwest Uganda. Clinics will be randomly chosen to either continue to provide study participants standard care or to provide the study intervention, which consists of discussion and counseling on major issues or life events, flexible access to the clinic, and rapid turnaround of VL test results. Participants will take part in the study for at least 2 years.
In this mixed-methods research study, the study team will offer comprehensive safer conception services to 150 HIV-uninfected women reporting an HIV-infected or high-risk partner and personal or partner plans for pregnancy in rural Uganda to evaluate prevalence and determinants of uptake and adherence (tenofovir plasma concentration >40ng/mL, opening pill device to take >80% of dispensed pills) to PrEP and other safer conceptions strategies among Ugandan women exposed to HIV.