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HIV Infections clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04708496 Recruiting - Malaria Clinical Trials

Optimizing Malaria Treatment for HIV-Malaria Co-infected Individuals

OPTIMAL
Start date: January 18, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Optimal is a Randomized clinical trial to optimize treatment of malaria in HIV -malaria co infected patients. It has been demonstrated that, when the antimalarial drug Artemether Lumefantrine is co administered with Efavirenz based ART in HIV-malaria co-infected individuals, sub therapeutic levels of the drug are achieved hence resulting in poor malaria treatment outcomes. The study then hypothesizes that, : HIV-malaria co-infected individuals receiving efavirenz-based ART plus a double-dose or 5-day course of artemether-lumefantrine will achieve higher and adequate artemether-lumefantrine serum concentrations with adequate 42-day treatment outcomes compared to individuals with HIV-malaria co-infection receiving efavirenz-based ART plus a standard-dose of artemether-lumefantrine.

NCT ID: NCT04704336 Active, not recruiting - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Integration of Hypertension Management Into HIV Care in Nigeria

TASSH NIMR
Start date: September 13, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates a tailored-practice facilitation (PF) strategy for integrating a task strengthening strategy for hypertension control (TASSH) for the care of patients living with HIV (PWH) within primary health centers (PHCs) in Lagos, Nigeria.

NCT ID: NCT04702412 Not yet recruiting - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

Electronic Capture of Adherence Barriers for HIV Care

CTNPT039
Start date: January 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) remains problematic. Our team has thus developed a new patient-reported measure of barriers to ART adherence (the I-Score) which will be completed by HIV patients through the Opal patient portal for routine HIV care. This 6-month mixed method pilot study will implement the I-Score/Opal intervention with 5 HIV physicians at the McGill University Health Centre (Montreal, Quebec) and 30 of their patients. The study's primary objectives are to assess patient and physician perceptions of the intervention (e.g., acceptability) and evaluate the implementation strategy. The data collected will help plan and determine the feasibility of a definitive effectiveness trial.

NCT ID: NCT04696861 Active, not recruiting - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

Telehealth to Reduce Suicidality and Improve HIV Care Engagement in Tanzania

Start date: May 17, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The overall objectives of the proposed research are to develop a brief telehealth counseling intervention to provide support for people living with HIV and experiencing suicidal ideation, and to support HIV care engagement. The investigators hypothesize that a brief telehealth counseling intervention will be safe (participants in the clinical trial will not have increased risk of suicidal behavior), acceptable (high patient retention and satisfaction, high fidelity), and will demonstrate preliminary efficacy (reduced suicidal ideation, improved care engagement, improved mental well-being).

NCT ID: NCT04692077 Completed - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

Safety, Tolerability and Acceptability of Long-Acting Cabotegravir (CAB LA) for the Prevention of HIV Among Adolescent Males - A Sub-study of HPTN 083

Start date: February 19, 2020
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study will establish the minimum safety, tolerability and acceptability data needed to support the use of cabotegravir long-acting injection (CAB LA) in an adolescent population, potentially transforming the field of HIV prevention for young people.

NCT ID: NCT04686279 Completed - HIV/AIDS Clinical Trials

Tenofovir Rectal Douche to Prevent HIV Transmission Among Adolescents (ATN DREAM)

Start date: April 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

ATN DREAM is an early phase-1, open label study to examine the safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics (PD), and acceptability of a one-dose tenofovir (TFV) medicated douche. The overall goal is to inform the design of an extended safety study of an on-demand and behaviorally congruent TFV douche to confer protection from HIV acquisition in an outpatient pre-RAI context

NCT ID: NCT04680390 Recruiting - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

HIV Prevention Peer Navigation for Justice Involved Women

kINSHIP
Start date: February 20, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Women involved in the criminal justice system have complex and highly stigmatized sexual and substance use risk profiles and are particularly vulnerable to, and experience, high rates of HIV. Criminal justice settings represent an important opportunity to address health disparities in HIV by linking women, who experience multiple, intersecting stigmas with innovative biomedical HIV prevention strategies, like pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). The investigators propose to develop and test a peer-led patient navigation intervention for criminal-justice involved (CJI) women at risk of HIV acquisition to reduce intersectional stigma and improve uptake and linkage to PrEP services, thereby increasing access to PrEP and decreasing PrEP-related disparities.

NCT ID: NCT04677842 Active, not recruiting - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

European Pregnancy and Paediatric Infections Cohort Collaboration: Paediatric Protocol

EPPICC
Start date: January 1, 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Across Europe and worldwide, there are many studies following groups (cohorts) of children living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and other infections over time, to monitor their long-term health. Some of these infections are rare: for example, few children in Western Europe are living with HIV, so the studies often have fairly small numbers of participants. This can make it difficult to answer research questions in these cohorts and means that doctors and researchers working with these patients in different countries need to work together. This is particularly important as children are not often included in clinical trials of treatments and other interventions. The European Pregnancy and Paediatric Infections Cohort Collaboration (EPPICC) is an international network of researchers working together in this way. Researchers in the network represent cohort studies of pregnant women and children with, or at risk of, infections from across Europe and Thailand. The research focuses on infections in pregnant women and children, particularly HIV, hepatitis B and C virus, and tuberculosis, and, from 2020, novel coronavirus (COVID-19). By combining data from many cohorts, the researchers aim to answer questions that could not be answered by one study individually (for example, because a large number of pregnant women or children are needed to answer the question). This protocol focuses on the paediatric component of EPPICC's research, which focuses on the treatment of children at risk of and living with infections. For example, what medicines are used most often and how do they affect children's health? EPPICC is an observational study, which means that children do not receive any extra treatment as part of the study. Instead, children are "observed" during their routine medical care. Each cohort keeps records of the children's health collected at routine clinic visits, including information such as date of birth and sex, results of diagnostic tests, treatments received, and any illnesses or other events that the children have had. The EPPICC study combines and analyses data from all of the cohorts that take part, to answer questions about the risks and benefits of different diagnosis or treatment strategies, the long-term effects of infection and treatment during childhood and young adulthood, and regional variations (e.g. between Western and Eastern Europe) in the risk and management of infections. All of the data collected through the EPPICC Paediatric Protocol are stored securely at the Medical Research Council Clinical Trials Unit (MRC CTU) at UCL. Data collection and storage are governed by the General Data Protection Regulation. A Steering Committee guides the research to make sure it is relevant and of high quality. Public and patient involvement (PPI) may be provided by individual cohorts' own groups, as well as by the interlinked Penta organisation, which is a network of paediatricians and researchers working in infections in Europe and globally. The PPI groups help with release of the results of the research. The results are also published on the Penta Foundation's public website (https://penta-id.org/), and presented at conferences and published in Open Access scientific journals.

NCT ID: NCT04677374 Completed - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

Uptake of Medical Male Circumcision Among Men With Sexually Transmitted Infections

VMMC-RITe
Start date: February 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The intervention includes provision of transport reimbursement for men who will undergo voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC), intensified health education by a VMMC mobilizer and a male and female VMMC champion and use of a cell phone short messaging service (SMS) and/or telephonic tracing to remind clients of their VMMC appointment (the RITe intervention). The investigators will assess the uptake of VMMC, and acceptability, appropriateness and feasibility of the RITe intervention among uncircumcised men attending a Sexually Transmitted Infection (STI) clinic and health care workers. This intervention was initially designed to include escorting men interested in circumcision from the STI clinic to a VMMC clinic co-located in the same facility. However, the VMMC clinic space was repurposed to a COVID-19 isolation unit therefore clinic escorts were excluded. In Lieu of clinic escorts, participants will be linked to the nearest health facility of choice where VMMC services are provided by the VMMC mobilizer. The purpose of the study is to evaluate the impact of using transport reimbursement, intensified health education and SMS/telephonic tracing in increasing the uptake of voluntary medical male circumcision at this clinic.

NCT ID: NCT04672083 Completed - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

A Clinical Study of the HIV Drug CPT31 in Healthy Volunteers

Start date: November 16, 2020
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This first-in-human study will evaluate the safety, tolerability, immunogenicity, and pharmacokinetics of the HIV entry inhibitor CPT31 (cholesterol-PIE12-2-trimer) in healthy adults. This is a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, single ascending dose study.