View clinical trials related to HIV Infections.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the first web-based cessation program developed expressly for people living with HIV who smoke tobacco. Main study goals are (1) to evaluate the website's feasibility (i.e., recruitment, adherence, retention, and satisfaction) and (2) to complete a prospective, randomized controlled trial comparing the efficacy of the online program to standard care with a primary outcome of 3 month point-prevalence abstinence.
Study ING116529 is a multicenter, randomized, study with an initial 7 day placebo- controlled, functional monotherapy phase to quantify the antiviral activity attributable to dolutegravir (DTG) in HIV-1 infected, ART-experienced adults who are experiencing virological failure on an Integrase inhibitor containing regimen (current RAL or ELV failures), with evidence of genotypic resistance to RAL or ELV at study entry. Thirty subjects will be randomized (1:1) to receive either DTG 50mg BID (Arm A) or Placebo (Arm B) with the current failing regimen for 7 days (RAL or ELV should be discontinued prior to dosing with DTG). At Day 8, subjects from both arms will enter an open label phase and receive open label DTG 50mg BID with an optimized background regimen containing at least one fully active drug.
This study is to evaluate the efficacy darunavir/cobicistat/emtricitabine/GS-7340 (D/C/F/TAF) single-tablet regimen (STR) versus darunavir (DRV)+cobicistat (COBI)+emtricitabine(FTC)/tenofuvir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) in HIV-1 infected, antiretroviral treatment-naive adults as determined by the achievement of HIV-1 RNA < 50 copies/mL at Week 24.
Dolutegravir (DTG, GSK1349572) is an integrase inhibitor that is currently in Phase 3 clinical development for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Co-infection with Hepatitis C (HCV) is common in HIV-infected subjects therefore it is expected that DTG will be coadministered with treatments for HCV. Boceprevir (BCV) and Telaprevir (TVR) are protease inhibitors for the treatment of HCV that were recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration/European Medicines Agency (FDA/EMA) and have rapidly been adopted to "standard of care" in combination with pegylated interferon and ribavarin. This is a single-center, open-label, two-cohort, two-period, one-way, study in healthy adult subjects. A total of approximately 32 subjects will be enrolled, in order to obtain 24 evaluable subjects (12 per cohort). In the first treatment period, all subjects will receive DTG 50 mg once daily for 5 days (treatment A). In period 2, subjects will receive DTG 50 mg once daily plus either BCV 800 mg q8h (treatment B) for 10 days or TVR 750 mg q8h (treatment C) for 10 days. There will be no washout between treatments. Safety evaluations and serial PK samples will be collected during each treatment period. Subjects will have a screening visit within 30 days prior to the first dose of study drug, two treatment periods, and a follow-up visit 7-14 days after the last dose of study drug. This study will be conducted at one center in the US, with healthy adult male and female subjects.
Testing and Linkage to Care for Injecting Drug Users in Kenya: Interventions for people who inject drugs (PWID) in sub-Saharan African have been almost entirely absent, despite the fact that in countries like Kenya they contribute a growing proportion of incident HIV infections. This study will leverage a historic decision in Kenya to launch needle exchange program (NSP) and related services for this most-at-risk population (MARP). The investigators will use this NSP/MARP platform to seek out PWID, deliver rapid HIV testing, point of care CD4 count and link to ART using peer case managers, and evaluate community viral load impact using a stepped wedge cluster-randomized design. Lessons learned will have important applicability throughout sub-Saharan African. HCV Among PWID in Kenya: A Supplement to the TLC-IDU study: The prevalence of HCV in Kenya, where an increasing number of people who inject drugs (PWID) live and are becoming HIV- as well as HCV-infected, has not been defined. We will establish HCV prevalence among PWID in Nairobi, Western, and Coastal region by adding HCV rapid and confirmatory tests in our parent PWID study (TLC-IDU Kenya); deliver appropriate counseling and treatment options to those eligible; collect HCV treatment adherence data; and disseminate study findings. These data will provide novel and relevant information about HCV and HIV co-infection in Kenya among PWID that will be immediately applicable in terms of public health impact to national and regional HCV testing, counseling, and clinical management policy.
The aims of STRIDE were changed as of July, 2014. The revised project, called STRIDE2, has a longitudinal, non-randomized, observational study design. The population under study consists of individuals living with HIV who are dependent on opioids.
The RV 156A clinical trial is evaluating an experimental HIV vaccine in people who are not infected with HIV. Participants in that study are randomly assigned to receive either the HIV vaccine or placebo. This study will enroll people who are participating in the RV 156 study. In this study, researchers will evaluate the safety of and immune response to a different experimental HIV vaccine in people who participated in the RV 156 study.
Currently, no vaccine prevents HIV infection. This study will test the safety and immune responses of an HIV-1 DNA vaccine in HIV-uninfected adults in a Ugandan population.
This is a study to determine the safety of dapivirine gel and dapvirine film for healthy, HIV-uninfected women aged 18-45 years using the product for 7 daily doses.
The purpose of this study is to examine the safety, tolerability, and immune response to killed-whole HIV-1 (SAV001-H) vaccine as a primary vaccination regimen in HIV infected individuals.