View clinical trials related to HIV Infections.
Filter by:The HIV/AIDS crisis in Sub-Saharan Africa has left millions of children orphaned. These children, who are potentially infected with HIV themselves, are highly vulnerable and face some serious risks to their health and overall well-being. A variety of health and economic interventions to help orphans and vulnerable children (OVCs) (and the households in which they live) are being carried out in Mozambique by World Education Inc./Bantwana (WEI/B), funded by USAID. The program is known in Portuguese as Força à Comunidade e Crianças or FCC (in English, "Strengthening Family and Communities"). This study will collect survey and administrative data to assess the impact of the FCC program on OVCs and the households in which they live. A baseline survey was administered to define a sample of households and individuals to follow over time through the upcoming follow-up survey and to measure baseline household characteristics. Follow-up data collection will begin in March 2019. It has several components: 1. Household survey The follow-up survey will provide measurements of the rich set of intermediate and final outcomes for the estimation of treatment effects of the FCC program. 2. Data collection on HIV testing and school attendance This study will supplement survey-reported HIV testing rates with an objective, administrative measure of HIV testing at health clinics. At the time of the follow-up survey, the survey team will recommend that eligible individuals in the household be tested for HIV at a specified local health clinic. To allow tracking of those who follow through with testing, consenting individuals will be given coupons redeemable for a small financial incentive once they have completed an HIV test. In addition to self-reported data on school participation by children, this study will also measure school participation directly. Both school enrollment (presence in school registration records) and school attendance (physical presence of children in school during unannounced school visits by research staff) will be measured. Project staff will visit schools in study communities to check attendance rates of specific school-aged children who were listed in the baseline survey in their community. 3. Informational treatments aimed at raising HIV testing rates To allow insight into the mechanisms through which the FCC program has its effects, this study will provide additional simple treatments in the context of the follow-up survey to explore possible FCC mechanisms: stigma reduction, HIV/AIDS information, and HIV treatment (antiretroviral therapy, or ART) information.
Senegal plans a rapid scale up of HIV treatment for all people living with HIV, regardless of cluster of differentiation 4 (CD4) count or viral suppression. However, limited data exist on how to achieve sustained viral suppression outside of a controlled setting, and with significant barriers to effective antiretroviral therapy delivery, uptake, and adherence. The purpose of this study is to develop and assess the feasibility, fidelity, and cost-effectiveness of a universal coverage of Antiretroviral Treatment (ART) intervention among people living with HIV who are not virally suppressed in Dakar and Ziguinchor, Senegal.
The goal of this study is to facilitate uptake of and adherence to HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in Kenya. The investigators will conduct a cluster randomized controlled trial at 24 health facilities in Kisumu, Kenya of a clinical training intervention using standardized patient actors. The hypothesis is that the training will improve quality of PrEP service delivery, defined as adherence to national guidelines and non-judgmental communication.
The University Hospital Essen is sponsoring the Multicenter human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and sexually transmitted infections Prevention Network Study (STIPnet) which is funded by Janssen, Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson. STIPnet study is a prospective observational cohort study aiming to determine the incidence and point prevalence of HIV infection and the most common sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in individuals with sexual risk behavior. In addition, the University Hospital Essen will examine whether individuals at risk for HIV and STI infections would retain in such a study (retention rate) and would be willing to participate in potential HIV and STI prevention trials (willingness to participate).
The purpose of this study is to compare the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of CH505TF gp120 produced from stably transfected cells to CH505TF gp120 produced from transiently transfected cells in healthy, HIV-1-uninfected adult participants.
Though HAV is mainly transmitted through the fecal-oral route, infection by sexual intercourse and blood transfusion is also possible. Injection drug users (IDUs) and men who have sex with men (MSM) have a higher risk of acquiring HAV due to their behaviors. Reemerging threat of hepatitis A among MSM in Taiwan has been reported recently. Based on the guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of HIV/AIDS and the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), Taiwan, vaccination of individuals against HAV with any of the following indications is recommended: HIV patients, adults with chronic hepatic disease, hemophilia, liver transplantation, occupational exposure, MSM, persons who use injection or noninjection illicit drugs, or persons traveling to or working in countries that have endemicity of HAV. In HIV-infected patients, the immunogenicity to HAV vaccination is sub-optimal in HIV-infected patients and the seroconversion rate is estimated 68-90% after administration of 2 or 3 doses of HAV vaccine. Furthermore, the antibody titers of HIV-infected patients following HAV vaccination are significantly lower compared to those of HIV-uninfected persons. The sub-optimal response among HIV-infected subjects remains an unresolved problem. In this study, the investigators aim to determine the to conduct a randomized clinical trial to compare the immunogenicity of 2 different doses of HAV vaccination (1 dose versus 2 doses) in HIV-infected patients who failed to achieve serologic response in the primary vaccination. This proposal will provide the solid evidence to elucidate the role of booster HAV vaccination in HIV-infected patients without response to primary HAV vaccination.
The response to primary tetanus immunization of HIV-infected children is lower than that of uninfected children. Response to tetanus toxoid (TT) booster doses in adults living with HIV who have received primary vaccination prior to infection is not known. Currently, it is recommended to have a TT booster for people living with HIV (PLHIV) every 10 years. In general population, this recall is made only at 25, 45 and 65 years, then every 10 years.
The investigators propose to conduct a phase 2 randomised (1:1) double-blind placebo-controlled trial of the dolutegravir-lamivudine-tenofovir fixed dose combination tablet daily with an additional 50 mg dose of dolutegravir/matching placebo taken 12 hours later in ART-naïve or fisrt-line interrupted HIV-infected patients on rifampicin-based anti-tuberculosis therapy. The hypothesis is that virologic outcomes with standard dose dolutegravir-based ART will be acceptable in patients on rifampicin-based anti-tuberculosis therapy.
This study will develop and test a program to deliver PrEP care in underserved communities in Mississippi (MS) through telemedicine, distance-based, clinical care delivered in local community based organizations (CBOs). The intervention will be developed in collaboration with medical specialists at the University of Mississippi Medical Center (UMMC) and local CBO stakeholders (providers, administrators and patients). Approximately 75 individuals will be recruited from CBOs in MS. Participants will be able to receive PrEP counseling in the CBO and PrEP care via telemedicine from a PrEP specialist at UMMC. Participants will complete three assessments in the six months after enrolling. Our study will provide a wealth of information about PrEP-related outcomes and HIV testing among MS residents living in underserved communities. If successful, this program will be able to be disseminated to other CBOs in the South.
The purpose of this study is to examine the feasibility of an intervention to prevent chronic diseases like diabetes, high blood pressure, and obesity in midlife and older Latino adults living with HIV. The investigators expect that the participant will be in this study for seven months. Participants will be interviewed and asked to take part in walking groups.