View clinical trials related to HIV Infections.
Filter by:This small pilot randomized controlled trial will test whether a brief, web-based intervention inspired by the principles of motivational interviewing helps high-risk men who take pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) moderate their alcohol use, and improve key outcomes of PrEP care, including adherence, persistence, and STI rates. Men with a history of "lapses" in PrEP adherence will be randomly assigned to either (1) use the web-based intervention, called Game Plan for PrEP, or (2) watch video clips encouraging healthy lifestyles (e.g., sleep hygiene, balanced diet; attention-matched control). Participants will complete STI testing and submit dried blood spot (DBS) samples to facilitate analyses of alcohol use and PrEP adherence biomarkers at baseline, 3-months, and 6-months during the study period. Participants will also complete online surveys at baseline, 1-month, 3-months, and 6-months during the study period.
This is a hybrid implementation-effectiveness study using both qualitative and quantitative methods. The research aims to examine whether providing a new, but approved, HIV once a month injection treatment [Cabotegravir-Rilpivirine Long Acting (CAB-RPV LA)] to individuals who are living with HIV outside of the standard doctors office or clinic increases adherence to treatment. This HIV monthly injections treatment which is already being delivered within the clinic setting, will be administered to participants in community partner spaces, reducing the barriers that having to present to a traditional clinic for treatment creates. Individuals who will receive the injection need to have a history of being unable to take their HIV oral medication, as well as other barriers to care that make it difficult to engage in a traditional clinic setting. These barriers may include, but are not limited to, homelessness, substance use, mental illness, and stigma around their diagnosis. Data will be collected on whether it was easier for the participants to receive care in a non-traditional setting, as well as whether the injection made it easier for them to remain adherent to their HIV medication in comparison to standard oral HIV medication.
This study aims to evaluate the efficacy of cefixime compared to benzathine penicillin G in the treatment of syphilis.
The Pilot Test (AKA Study B) will entail a pilot randomized, controlled trial (RCT) of an mHealth behavioral intervention, LetSync, with 80 couples (N=160) to assess its acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary impact on retention in care and ART adherence as measured by antiretroviral concentrations in hair. Participants in the intervention arm will use LetSync v1.0 for 6 months and provide acceptability and feasibility data. In the ensuing 2 months, the investigators will make refinements based on participants' data to produce LetSync v2.0. Then, participants in the waitlist-control arm will receive LetSync v2.0, use it for 6 months, and provide acceptability and feasibility data. The intervention arm will continue using LetSync v1.0, for a total of 14 months. Based on acceptability and feasibility data from waitlist control arm participants between T3 and T4, the investigators will develop LetSync v3.0, which will be used for efficacy testing in a full RCT trial in the future.
Combination interventions with mHealth and Peer Navigation components will be evaluated in a randomized, stepped wedge trial among youth in Ibadan, Lagos, Sagamu, and Jos, Nigeria. Study findings will demonstrate whether or not the combination interventions for HIV testing and linkage to care and for HIV treatment outcomes, which were found to be efficacious in our prior pilot UG3 trial, will remain efficacious if scaled as proposed in this UH3 trial, across multiple sites.
This clinical trial evaluates the usefulness of using a smartphone-based HIV-specific smoking cessation intervention at the time of lung cancer screening in helping people living with HIV quit smoking. Positively Smoke Free - Mobile may help patients with HIV quit smoking.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy a Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) program for linking opioid dependent individuals currently incarcerated or in probation in Moldova, Kyrgyzstan, and Ukraine to opioid substitution therapy in the community after release or during their probation period.
This is a clinical trial for TPLWH (Trans People Living with HIV) who are stable on cART with an undetectable viral load or a detectable viral load but no resistance to NRTIs and InSTI. Following written consent and screening procedures, study subjects will undergo a switch (or will restart) of their combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) to Biktarvy. The goal of this research project is to recruit an understudied population into a controlled clinical trial aimed at optimizing TPLWH cART. This will be demonstrated by measuring viral load outcomes at regular intervals, with a focus on viral load results 48 weeks after Biktarvy initiation (primary outcome).
The pilot study proposal aims to modulate craving and attentional bias towards smoking cues in 40 people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), with functional MRI (fMRI) brain correlates. TMS is a form of noninvasive brain stimulation and modulates neural activity using tiny doses of focused electricity. For the study, participants would perform two cognitive tasks and neuroimaging before and after the TMS and investigators would compare changes in these paradigms with TMS. The investigators will also get a point of contact urine drug screen before study initiation. The investigators will aim to recruit 20 subjects in each arm of our trial (total of 40) from the BlueGrass HIV Clinic.
The METHOD study will examine whether adding metformin to standard antibiotic treatment for tuberculosis (TB) in people with HIV is safe and well tolerated. The study will also test if adding metformin clears the infection more quickly and with less lung damage. When enrolled, participants will have an equal chance of being in the group that takes standard TB medicines alone or in the group that also takes metformin. Participants will have a chance to be put on either: 1) standard TB medicines (isoniazid, rifampicin, ethambutol and pyrazinamide for two months, continuing isoniazid and rifampin for four more months) only; or 2) the same standard TB medicines plus metformin. Participants randomized to the metformin arm will take metformin for eleven weeks, starting one week after starting the standard TB medicines. In addition to monitoring for side effects, all participants will have studies of drug levels and lung and immune function.