View clinical trials related to HIV.
Filter by:This randomized controlled trial was implemented to evaluate the effect of integrating rapid Hepatitis C (HCV) testing into a pre-existing screening program for Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) on HIV test acceptance and diagnosis of both HCV and HIV. A sample of 478 adults in a New York City Emergency Department participated in the study. Participants were randomized to receive either an offer of bundled HIV/HCV testing or HIV testing alone. Public Health Advocates approached eligible patients in the Emergency Department, performed HIV and HCV raid testing, and delivered test results to participants with post-test counseling. The primary outcome, HIV test acceptance, was compared between the two groups to evaluate whether the addition of an HCV test adversely impacted participants' consent to test for HIV. Questionnaires were also distributed to participants to assess HCV knowledge.
Specific aims of the 1-year project are to pilot test the disclosure support intervention by (a) evaluating acceptability and feasibility with a preliminary randomized trial among 10 HIV+ mothers (5 in the intervention group and 5 in the treatment as usual (TAU) group) and (b) assessing outcomes in mothers (quality of life and mental health indicators, adherence, social support, and disclosure stress, efficacy, readiness, and completion). The intervention will be compared to treatment as usual, with baseline (0 weeks), immediate post-intervention (4 weeks), and 12-week follow-up (16 weeks) assessments.
The purpose of this study is to examine how the consent process affects the acceptability of participation in biomedical HIV prevention trials, from the perspective of behaviorally high-risk minors and the parents of minor adolescents.
Despite treatment with antiretroviral therapy, women living with HIV continue to experience cognitive impairment. Psychological risk factors, including stress, impair cognition more in HIV-infected women than HIV-uninfected women. This study plans to examine a novel intervention for cognitive dysfunction that targets the mechanisms by which stress negatively affects cognitive functioning.
Background: The immune system helps the body fight off disease. Most people infected with HIV cannot control the infection and need daily medicine. Combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) are drugs taken to prevent HIV infection from damaging the immune system. Researchers want to study why some people develop resistance to the drugs or have permanent side effects. Objective: To study the impact of a short-term treatment stop on HIV that persists even while taking cART. Eligibility: Adults 18-65 years old with HIV who are being treated with cART Design: - Participants will first be screened with a physical exam and medical history. They may have a chest x-ray. They will have heart, blood, and urine tests. - At the baseline visit, participants will repeat the screening tests except the x-ray. They will get counseling about HIV and risk behavior. - Participants will have leukapheresis. Blood will be removed through a needle in one arm. A machine will separate white blood cells from the rest of the blood. The remainder of the blood will be returned to the body by a different needle. - Participants will stop their current treatment on day 0. They will visit the clinic each week until they meet the criteria to restart cART. These visits will have the same procedures as the baseline visit. - Before restarting cART, most participants will have leukapheresis. - After restart, participants will be seen weekly for 4 weeks and then monthly for about 11 months. Participants will have blood drawn, physical exam, and medical history. They will have leukapheresis 2 more times over 1 year.
Substance use disorders (SUDs), depression and anxiety in HIV-infected patients result in poor HIV outcomes, yet are often unrecognized and untreated. To address these problems, this study examines the implementation and effectiveness of a clinical intervention consisting of self-administered tablet-based SUD and depression screening at routine HIV primary care clinic visits, followed by evidence-based treatments for SUD, anxiety and depression delivered by a behavioral health specialist. If successful, this study has potential to reduce SUD-, anxiety- and depression-related problems and reduce HIV treatment disparities for patients with these comorbidities.
This study evaluates whether a 7-day course of Raltegravir 400mg bd or Raltegravir 400mg/lamivudine 150mg bd can prevent HIV from infecting genital tissue and will relate the level of drug in the blood to the level of drug in genital tissue and to the ability to of HIV to infect genital tissue. As well as determining whether these regimes can provide ex vivo protection against HIV, this study will also determine speed to provision of protection and a 48 hour PK/PD decay profile of Raltegravir following drug cessation after attaining steady state concentrations. The results will also inform all future HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis studies of Raltegravir and form the basis for large scale clinical trials without the need for tissue sampling. To date, efficacy studies assessing PrEP regimens have utilized HIV-acquisition endpoints with the consequence being such studies are required to be large in subject number in order to power observations. In addition the study will provide for the first time data on HIV protection rather than just Raltegravir drug levels in tissue, and allow assessment of the possibility of Raltegravir being used as an intermittent dosing regimen in PrEP.
The AELIX-002 study aims to evaluate the safety and the immunogenicity of an heterologous prime-boost regimen with DNA.HTI, MVA.HTI and ChAdOx1.HTI in early diagnosed and treated HIV-1 positive individuals, males and females,18-60 years of age.
This study aims to determine the feasibility of recruiting and retaining men who have sex with men (MSM) in a multi-country prospective cohort study in preparation for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) prevention studies in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA).
South Africa is implementing the policy of universal initiation of lifelong antiretroviral therapy (ART) in all HIV-infected pregnant women regardless of CD4 cell count or disease stage ("Option B+"). There is a recognised need for innovative models of service delivery to support adherence and retention in care in this group, particularly during the postpartum period. The investigators are conducting a pragmatic randomised control trial to compare virological outcomes 24 months postpartum in two models of service delivery for provision of HIV care and treatment services postpartum in women who initiated ART during pregnancy: local adult ART clinics and community-based adherence clubs.