View clinical trials related to HIV Infections.
Filter by:Cigarette smoking remains highly prevalent among persons living with HIV (PLWH). Quitting smoking can have important health benefits for this population. However, PLWH have historically had a difficult time quitting smoking. This is likely due, at least in part, to poor medication adherence. Poor adherence to medication is a well-documented issue among PLWH. Research shows that not taking smoking cessation medications as prescribed can limit their treatment effectiveness. Improving adherence to smoking cessation medications will likely increase smoking cessation attempt success. Mobile phone applications and behavioral interventions show promise for improving adherence to smoking cessation medications and cessation outcomes among PLWH. Therefore, this trial will assess 1) whether a mobile phone application is a feasible and acceptable intervention for improving medication adherence; 2) whether use of the mobile phone app improves adherence to varenicline; and 3) smoking cessation outcomes.
i2-D²EFT substudy is an observational cohort nested within the parent D²EFT study (NCT03017872). D²EFT goal is to compare the standard of care second-line antiretroviral therapy in people living with HIV whose first-line non nucleoside reverse transcriptase-based regimen failed, to two simpler regimens. Approximately 1,000 participants will be enrolled in D²EFT. Commencing a second-line ART is an important moment when the level of inflammation in participants may be elevated due to first-line ART failure; this level of inflammation should then decrease with the commencement of a new second-line treatment and would be expected to normalise by 48 weeks of second-line treatment, if successful. The investigators propose to study other factors which can influence the decrease of inflammation. The investigators hypothesise that co-infections may play a role in persistent inflammation. The key-infections of interest will be common frequent infections encounter throughout the world: Human Herpes virus 8, Epstein-Barr virus, Cytomegalovirus and Human papillomavirus, tuberculosis, malaria and other key opportunistic infections. Possible changes of level of inflammation (using the serum level of Interleukin 6) in approximately 200 participants of the D²EFT study will be investigated and measured. The hypothesis is that the presence of other infections than HIV may influence the level of inflammation in participants in therapeutic success.
Technology that has a particular focus on patients' needs and ease-of-use and -access plays a significant role in the development of e-health and m-health. The proposed model of a secured mobile health application may promote patient's self-management and enhances adherence in chronic therapy exactly as it is easy-to-use, reducing patient's burden in accessing medication information and instructions, and providing the opportunity for direct communications with health providers in charge for each patient with access to mobile technologies. Consequently, medication errors and unnecessary paperwork in the healthcare system will be avoided as well as giving more time for healthcare providers to pay greater attention to delivering medical care effectively and efficiently.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of HIV-1 BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140 with TLR agonist and/or alum adjuvants in healthy, HIV-uninfected adults.
The advent of anti-retroviral therapy (ART) for people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) substantially improved life expectancy but has also led to the critical need to address modifiable risk factors associated with cancer and cardiovascular disease, such as tobacco smoking. HIV-infected smokers lose more life-years due to tobacco use than they do to their HIV infection. There have been relatively few studies of tobacco use treatments for PLWHA and systematic reviews show that there are insufficient data to conclude that tobacco dependence interventions that are efficacious in the general population are efficacious for PLWHA. Further, many studies in this area have lacked randomization and a control group, infrequently used an intent-to-treat (ITT) approach and biological verification of tobacco abstinence, and lacked post-treatment follow-up.10 What investigators do know thus far is that behavioral interventions and the nicotine patch yield moderate effects on cessation; and 2 recent placebo-controlled trials - one in France and one by this lab - found that varenicline is safe and effective for treating tobacco use among PLWHA, but yield quit rates that are substantially lower than those reported in the general population. Thus, there is a critical need to rigorously test novel ways to optimize tobacco cessation treatment for smokers with HIV.
HIV eradication faces a major obstacle that is viral persistence in latent reservoir cells despite antiretroviral therapy. Epigenetic repression plays a central role in viral transgene latency and several epigenetic regulators have been involved in this process. Among them, the "Human Silencing Hub" or HUSH complex, composed of Tasor, MPP8 and periphilin, has been shown to recruit the H3K9me3 methyltransferase "SET domain bifurcated 1" (SETDB1) and is therefore responsible for genes' epigenetic repression. Our recent results highlight the ability of Vpx from HIV-2/SIVsmm to counteract HUSH and to reactivate latent viruses in a latency model. We propose here to study HUSH activity along pathogenesis.
The purpose of this study is to test the efficacy of a theory-driven peer intervention for pregnant and postpartum women living HIV. The peer intervention is designed to increase self-efficacy, social support, self-regulatory behaviors, and outcome expectancy in order to improve retention in care and viral suppression postpartum. The intervention will consist of face-to-face prenatal educational sessions, starting in early third trimester, and postpartum sessions scheduled up to three months postpartum.
The aim of this study is to examine the utility of neuroimaging technique to evaluate pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) promotion messages for men who have sex with men (MSM) at risk of HIV in Baltimore.
Patients eligible for the study will be selected on Fridays during the HIV consultation at the Infectious Diseases Department. Patients that meet the inclusion and exclusion criteria, will be randomized and assigned in two groups 1:1. A group will start intervention with FMT (fecal matter transplant) through frozen capsules and after seven days, antiretroviral therapy (ART) will be started. Patients in the other group will be given placebo capsules and after seven days ART will be started. The frozen capsules of FMT will be ingested orally with a frequency of 15 capsules every 12 hours for 4 doses 7 days prior ART start and on weeks 0, 4, 8 and 12 after ART start. Subsequently, blood samples will be taken to monitor the immune status with CD4 T lymphocytes and HIV viral load during week 0, 4, 8, 12 and 24 after ART start. Throughout the study period, subjects can carry out a free diet, moderate alcohol intake, perform their daily activities and abstain from any of the elimination criteria. Medical consultations will be made on days -7 to ART start, day 1, 30, 60, 90 and 120 after ART start, where clinical examination and elimination criteria will be evaluated.
This study seeks to determine whether workplace delivery of HIV self-testing will lead to an increase in uptake of HIV testing and subsequent linkage to care or prevention services among men in Uganda.