View clinical trials related to HIV Infections.
Filter by:This study will test innovative interventions to increase uptake and use of biomedical HIV prevention options by engaging women and men at drinking venues in rural Kenya and Uganda in care, while gaining insights into the facilitators, barriers, and cost-effectiveness of these approaches.
The primary objective of this study is to identify and characterize frailty and pre-frailty in persons age 50 and older living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) followed by the Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist Infectious Diseases Specialty Clinics (IDSC).
This study is a prospective, open-label, single-site, first-in-human study of a long-acting, injectable combination antiretroviral therapy platform, with a pharmacologically-guided adaptive design for dose escalation, de-escalation, and study duration. The study is designed to learn whether the formulation can be used as a platform for other drugs for treatment of HIV. The formulation is a drug combination nanoparticle (DCNP). The study will be conducted by UW Positive Research. The sample size for this study is 12-16. The study population consists of healthy adults without HIV. The study duration is 57 days per participant at the start of the study.
Despite advances in HIV diagnostics, care and prevention strategies, infection rates among adolescent and young adult sexual and gender minorities (SGM) continue to rise in the United States (US). There is an urgent need to describe the epidemiology and trajectories of HIV acquisition in this population and to offer age and culturally appropriate scalable prevention interventions to those at highest risk of infection in the US. This project will engage and retain young SGM in an innovative longitudinal cohort, enroll participants in a dynamic established digital health retention platform (HMP; HealthMPowerment), monitor HIV risk and prevention behaviors and explore the socioecological factors that influence the use of new HIV prevention technologies (UG3 phase), while also allowing targeted testing of novel digital health interventions (UH3 phase). In Aim 1, the investigators will enroll and retain a large (n=6000; 3000/year), diverse cohort of sexually active, SGM adolescents and young adults, ages 13-34, using innovative digital recruitment, engagement and retention strategies. Over the course of the study, the investigators will longitudinally characterize the sexual behavior, HIV transmission risk, and PrEP uptake trajectories of SGM youth utilizing epidemiological trajectory analyses to identify the most effective points of intervention (Aim 2). This study will capitalize upon productive existing partnerships and digital health expertise to articulate the drivers of the ongoing HIV epidemic among the most vulnerable populations in the US in order to identify the most effective, expeditious and scalable strategies to address this ongoing public health crisis.
The goal of this study is to learn about supporting pregnant and postpartum women living with HIV with treatment adherence. The investigators will conduct a pilot study of an intervention that includes peer counseling about viral load levels and rapid delivery of viral load results. The investigators will evaluate the feasibility of the intervention, and will assess whether it improves viral suppression 6 months following the intervention, compared to historical controls.
The purpose of this study is to integrate elements from existing interventions developed by our team into a single intervention (QUIT-AD), designed to improve smoking cessation and favorable HIV/TB treatment outcomes among individuals with HIV and/or TB in Cape Town, South Africa. If feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy are demonstrated, the intervention will be ready for large-scale effectiveness/implementation testing. This program will has the potential to dramatically improve public health by increasing the smoking quit rate and facilitating favorable HIV/TB treatment outcomes among patients with HIV and/or TB in resource limited South African settings.
This study includes secondary quantitative analysis, qualitative methods, and hybrid type 2 implementation-effectiveness pilot trial. The overall goal of this protocol is to determine whether risk stratification of PWLWH in conjunction with a tailored psychosocial support intervention can optimize health outcomes for the vulnerable women and infants. This study will be conducted in high-volume, low-resource health facilities in Kisumu County, Kenya, which is a priority area for research among WLWH and one of the highest HIV burden counties.
The Australian Hepatitis and risk survey in prisons (AusHep) is a national prison-based blood-borne virus (BBV) surveillance study. This biobehavioural survey involves point-of-care testing for hepatitis C (HCV) antibodies and RNA (if antibody positive), hepatitis B surface antigens, hepatitis B surface antibodies, and HIV surface antibodies, and an interview-style survey on prior testing and treatment history and engagement in risk behaviours. The study will recruit approximately 2400 prisoner participants from 25 representative prisons across Australia, annually.
The primary goal of this observational study is to investigate sleep quality in patients living with HIV+. The secondary objective is to measure the influence of sleep quality on indicators of mental health (anxiety, depression and stress) and quality of life. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Measuring the effects of poor sleep quality on mental and physical health in HIV+ patients. - Monitor the sleep pattern in the HIV+ population. Participants will fill out an online cross-sectional survey. The online questionnaire survey will collect: - sociodemographic and clinical data related to HIV infection, - sleep quality, - mental health, - quality of life.
This randomized controlled trial evaluates the efficacy of couples HIV testing and counseling retesting. Eligible couples previously enrolled in NCT05000866 are invited to participate. Those who do are randomized to either couples HIV testing and counseling (CHTC) retesting or an individual HIV testing control. Follow-ups occur 3 and 6 months post intervention.