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HIV-1 Infection clinical trials

View clinical trials related to HIV-1 Infection.

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NCT ID: NCT04596488 Completed - HIV-1-infection Clinical Trials

Efavirenz 400mg in Treatment-naïve Chinese HIV-infected Patients

Start date: June 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Evaluating the efficacy, pharmacodynamics, and safety of Efavirenz 400mg in treatment-naïve Chinese HIV-infected patients.

NCT ID: NCT04568603 Completed - HIV-1 Infection Clinical Trials

Islatravir and Methadone Pharmacokinetics (MK-8591-029)

Start date: October 16, 2020
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The present study is designed to determine the effect of islatravir (ISL) [MK-8591] on methadone pharmacokinetics (PK). The primary objective is to assess whether ISL impacts the area under the plasma concentration time curve from dosing to 24 hours postdose (AUC0-24) of S-methadone and R-methadone in participants on oral methadone therapy. It is hypothesized that the plasma AUC0-24hr for S- and R-methadone will be similar after methadone alone compared to methadone and ISL 60 mg coadministration.

NCT ID: NCT04568239 Completed - HIV-1-infection Clinical Trials

Impact of M184V on the Virological Efficacy to 3TC/DTG (LAMRES)

LAMRES
Start date: September 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In view of the prolongation of patients living with HIV's life expectancy, the question of optimization of ART, which is still a life-long treatment, becomes central. While most patients achieve virological success, their treatments often need to be optimized in order to limit adverse events, drugs interactions and to improve adherence. The switch to dual regimen strategies represent one of the approaches for treatment optimization. Indeed, dual therapy regimens have shown non-inferior efficacy vs triple therapy as simplification therapy and more recently also as first line therapy. From the real-life data it emerges that today in simplification strategies, the dual regimen therapies are prescribed even in patients with a history of virological failure. Circulating HIV-1 resistant variants can be archived in viral reservoirs, where they can persist for years and can reemerge in case of therapeutic selective pressure. In particular, previous selection of M184V may have an impact on virological response to 3TC/DTG. There are few data on a direct comparison of 3TC/DTG efficacy in patients harboring or not harboring the M184V. So, there is a need to assess the efficacy of 3TC/DTG in patients with past M184V mutation in a large set of patients followed in clinical setting. Thus, the investigators propose a retrospective study of patients with HIV-RNA ≤50 copies/mL who were switched to 3TC/DTG in order to compare the virological efficacy of 3TC/DTG in patients with and without a history of M184V detection in a previous resistance genotype. This study aimed to analyze 800 patients switched to DTG/3TC in clinical real setting in large European (France, Italy, Spain) database.

NCT ID: NCT04563962 Completed - HIV-1-infection Clinical Trials

Contingency Management for PrEP Adherence and/or Methamphetamine Use

C-MAX
Start date: March 15, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Use of crystal methamphetamine (MA) leads to changes in sexual risk behavior, adherence to HIV prevention tools, immune response to infection, and tissue inflammation that collectively increase risk for HIV transmission among MA-using men who have sex with men (MSM), their sexual partners, and their networks. Contingency Management (CM) offers a behavioral modification tool helpful for reducing frequency of MA use, but the effects of CM on the behavioral and biological factors that promote HIV transmission in MSM networks have only been partially evaluated. The intersection of substance use, sexual risk behavior, and HIV transmission in MSM networks presents a critical problem for contemporary HIV prevention as HIV-uninfected MSM who use MA have a 16%-33% greater risk for HIV infection, while only approximately 50% of HIV-infected MA-using MSM achieve and maintain an undetectable viral load. The investigators propose to compare two different CM models to integrate substance use treatment with HIV prevention among MA-using MSM: 1) Traditional CM targeted to MA abstinence and 2) Allternative CM based on ARV adherence.

NCT ID: NCT04557332 Completed - HIV-1-infection Clinical Trials

mHealth for ART Adherence by HIV+ African Americans

Start date: April 1, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this grant is to create and test a mobile app to support ART adherence among HIV+ African American adults.

NCT ID: NCT04549467 Completed - Hiv Clinical Trials

Efficacy of Dolutegravir Plus Lamivudine in HIV-1-infected Treatment-naïve Adults Without a Baseline Genotyping Test

D2ARLING
Start date: November 17, 2020
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of DTG + 3TC versus DTG + TDF/FTC over 48 weeks in HIV-1 naive patients in a real life setting with no baseline HIV genotypic resistance testing available.

NCT ID: NCT04538040 Completed - HIV-1-infection Clinical Trials

Bictegravir/Emtricitabine/Tenofovir Alafenide Plus Doravirine

Start date: December 19, 2019
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The current study proposal is an open label observational trial for maintenance of virologic suppression, and is designed as a non- inferiority switch trial. The study will involve approximately 30 patients, which includes a PK arm of approximately 10 patients. The study will also include secondary outcomes of quality of life (QOL) and weight changes Hypothesis: Patients with prior NUC or NNRTI resistance (but not to rilpivirine or doravirine) will maintain their virologic suppression after a drug regimen switch from rilpivirine/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide in combination with dolutegravir, to bictegravir/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide in combination with doravirine. The switch therapy will avoid food interactions, and will be well tolerated by subjects.

NCT ID: NCT04517825 Completed - HIV-1-infection Clinical Trials

More Than a Machine: Make Point-of-care HIV-1 Viral Load Testing Effective in Rural Uganda

Start date: August 8, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a two-phase study designed to assess measures of feasibility, sustainability, acceptability, penetration, and fidelity before and after implementation of a rapid molecular HIV-1 viral load testing infrastructure at a level III health center in rural western Uganda. The central hypothesis is that implementation of PoC HIV-1 testing without accompanying modifications to clinic triage and flow, laboratory processes, and existing protocols guiding adherence counseling and regimen change, will not result in significant improvement in clinical outcomes in PLWH.

NCT ID: NCT04495348 Completed - HIV-1-infection Clinical Trials

Explorations Into the Mechanism for INSTI-associated Weight Gain: a Focus on Energy Balance

Start date: October 22, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Weight gain following antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation occurs with all modern regimens. Recent real-world reports suggest that integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INSTI)-based ART may be associated with excess weight gain compared to other regimens. Weight gain appears to occur regardless of baseline weight, and is most pronounced among women and minorities, often those at highest risk of obesity-associated comorbidities. INSTI- and TAF-based regimens are now preferred regimens for most persons according to the Department of Health and Human Services ART-Treatment Guidelines. As a result, there is an urgent need to understand the underlying mechanisms for this weight gain. This study aims to understand the changes in energy balance that occur with changes in ART. Participants with HIV who have experienced >10% weight gain on INSTI (bictegravir or dolutegravir-based therapy) will be switched to doravirine for 12 weeks, and then back to their prior INSTI regimen, allowing for assessment of changes in metabolic parameters with drug withdrawal and reintroduction (with no change to NRTI-backbone). Twenty-four hour energy balance will be measured on both regimens during a 24-hour stay using a whole room indirect calorimetry, with a standardized diet. Ultimately, the investigator's goal is to understand the mechanisms of weight gain so that future interventions can most effectively mitigate ART-associated weight changes.

NCT ID: NCT04459741 Completed - HIV-1-infection Clinical Trials

HIV, Immune Activation and Salt Sensitive Hypertension

HISH
Start date: January 2, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

High dietary salt is associated with immune activation, elevated levels of inflammatory cytokines and hypertension in murine models. Hypertension is independently associated with inflammation in both murine studies and studies in humans. In people living with HIV, these interactions are not well established. The aim of this study is to determine the effect of excess dietary salt on immune cell activation, pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines and blood pressure between individuals with and without hypertension among people living with HIV and HIV negative persons.