View clinical trials related to HIV Infections.
Filter by:Many patients who already harbor drug-resistant HIV require interruption of HAART due to poor compliance, poor quality of life, toxicity or development of resistance. In these patients interruption of HAART has a negative impact on patient immune status due to the reemergence of wild-type virus which is in general more pathogenic than HIV isolates containing resistance mutations. There is a need for "bridging" antiretroviral regimens that might prolong time off conventional HAART whilst waiting for a new regimen that is either fully suppressive or less toxic or less demanding for the patient.
The purpose of this program evaluation is to determine whether the Health Love Workshop, a group-level HIV behavioral intervention, reduces HIV-related sex risk behaviors and increases HIV protective behaviors of African American women and women of African descent. The intent of this program is to support an evaluation of the efficacy of the intervention and to provide feedback to the implementing organization to increase intervention effectiveness.
The purpose of this study is to determine the safety and activity of AMD11070 in HIV-infected patients carrying X4-tropic virus.
The purpose of this study was to compare the safety, tolerability, and antiviral activity of once-daily (QD) and twice-daily (BID) dosing of the lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r) tablet formulation in combination with nucleoside/nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) in antiretroviral-experienced human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infected subjects with detectable viral load while receiving their current antiretroviral therapy.
The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of changing didanosine in an effective anti-HIV regimen to tenofovir on virologic suppression. We hypothesize that, in patients with maximal virologic suppression on a double class regimen (including two NRTIs and an NNRTI or a PI, boosted with RTV or not), a single drug substitution of didanosine for tenofovir will represent a viable strategy without any negative impact on the virologic efficacy of the regimen.
The purpose of this clinical research study is to assess the pharmacokinetics of atazanavir administered twice-daily relative to historical data from atazanavir/ritonavir 300/100 mg, given once daily.
The purpose of this study is to administer a combined oral contraceptive (ethinyl estradiol and norgestimate) with the HIV treatment of atazanavir and ritonavir to healthy females in order to assess if the concentrations of the oral contraceptive change. The safety of this treatment regimen will also be studied.
Most anti-HIV regimens include a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI); however, some individuals fail on these regimens. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the protease inhibitor (PI) lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r) in HIV infected individuals who are failing an anti-HIV regimen that includes an NNRTI.
The purpose of this clinical research study is to assess the effect of omeprazole at 20 mg on the pharmacokinetics of atazanavir administered as atazanavir with ritonavir relative to atazanavir or atazanavir/ritonavir in the absence of omeprazole in healthy subjects.
The purpose of this study is to assess the exposure of Atazanavir 400 mg with Ritonavir 100 mg and with Efavirenz 600 mg compared to Atazanavir 300 mg with 100 mg without Efavirenz in Healthy Subjects