View clinical trials related to HIV Infections.
Filter by:This study will compare the effectiveness of enhanced counseling alone versus enhanced counseling combined with observed therapy at improving medication adherence in people with HIV.
The objective of this study was to assess the bioequivalence of Roxane's zidovudine 300 mg tablet compared to GlaxoSmithKline's Retrovir® 300 mg tablet under fasting conditions using a single-dose, randomized, 2-treatment, 2-period, 2-sequence crossover design.
The objective of this study was to assess the bioequivalence of Roxane's zidovudine 300 mg tablet compared to GlaxoSmithKline's Retrovir® 300 mg tablet under fed conditions using a single-dose, randomized, 2-treatment, 2-period, 2-sequence crossover design.
This study will develop and test the effectiveness of a cell phone-based text messaging program to encourage abstinence, monogamy, or condom use among black urban males in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
The purpose of this study is to investigate whether Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) vs a one-day MBSR seminar improves immune (CD4+ T lymphocytes) and virological (HIV viral load) status in HIV-1 infected adults. The secondary goal of the study is to determine if MBSR vs a one-day MBSR seminar improves self-reported HIV-related quality of life.
The objective of the study is to compare two different doses of Peg-INF-α-2A (90 or 180 ug/wk) for their ability to maintain viral control when initiated 5 weeks before ART (antiretroviral therapy) interruption in HIV positive, ART-suppressed subjects (viral load <50 copies/ml) as determined by observing the percentages of viral load measurements <400 copies/ml between the two arms over a 24-week period, corresponding to the Pegasys monotherapy period (exclusive of dual ART/Pegasys 5-week period). Primary analysis will be an "intent to treat" analysis and will address the hypothesis that two different doses of Peg-INF-α-2A (90 and 180 ug/week) will be similarly effective at inhibiting viral replication.
This study will evaluate how safe and tolerable a combination of taking three-drugs will be for the purpose of preventing HIV transmission after a high-risk sexual contact exposure in HIV uninfected adults.
Topical microbicides, substances that kill microbes, are being studied to prevent sexual transmission of HIV and other disease-causing agents. In the future, topical microbicides may be applied vaginally to prevent both acquisition and transmission of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs). The purpose of this study is to assess whether there is a measurable response to daily applications of a topical microbicide, 1% tenofovir gel, in women at low risk for HIV infection.
African Americans and Latinos are increasingly affected by HIV/AIDS in the United States. Despite the increase in the number of infections in minority populations, these individuals are not adequately represented in AIDS clinical trials (ACTs). The purpose of this study is to identify effective intervention strategies to increase the number of HIV infected racial/ethnic minorities and women who are screened for and enrolled into ACTs.
A new approach to HIV prevention currently being studied includes the use of microbicides, substances that kill microbes. Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) is an oral, FDA-approved, anti-HIV drug, and tenofovir gel is an experimental microbicide. The purpose of this study is to determine the adherence and acceptability to and blood levels of three daily regimens of tenofovir in both oral and gel form.