View clinical trials related to HIV.
Filter by:The purpose of this study to assess the effect of maternal vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) supplementation on maternal HIV progression, small-for-gestational age infants, and infant stunting at 12 months postpartum for HIV-infected Tanzanian pregnant women who are receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART).
Tenofovir continues to play a vital role in the treatment of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and as the age of the HIV-infected population increases in the United States and worldwide, there is an urgent need to understand the extent to which older age influences the way this antiretroviral medication works in the body. The investigators study aims to characterize and compare the pharmacology of tenofovir in older versus younger HIV-infected adults and to assess kidney function over the course of approximately one year. The investigators will be analyzing tenofovir levels in different compartments of the blood and in hair samples, and will be assessing the relationship between tenofovir concentrations and changes in kidney function over time in the older and younger cohorts. Lastly, the investigators will be evaluating the relationship between tenofovir concentrations and functional status (including body composition, bone mineral density, and frailty) in study participants.
In the early 2000s, the "TRILEGE©" study was realized to determine if the reductive anti retroviral strategy from an initial triple therapy (based on a protease inhibitor as the third agent) towards a dual therapy of nucleoside analogs (in particular the association of "zidovudine +lamivudine") for patients infected by HIV and stabilized for at least 3 months at a threshold value of 400 copies/ml, would allow to obtain a well-controlled plasmatic viral load, with an aim to reduce the long-term side effects of the treatment. The afore mentioned study showed that the reductive anti retroviral strategy was a failure. No study has as yet to revaluate this strategy, in particular in the current context of antiretroviral treatments. Indeed, modern nucleoside inhibitors (Kivexa®, Truvada®) have extended half-lives as well as a superior intrinsic power as compared to treatments proposed in the initial "TRILEGE©" study. Furthermore, the better quality of current triple therapy (as compared to that used 10 years ago) has lead to substantial viral reservoir reduction. Currently, a small number of patients is being successfully treated in the long-term (viral load < 20 copies/ml) using nucleoside analog dual therapy. The particular characteristics of these patients have yet to be thoroughly investigated. The patients concerned were all treated prematurely before ever passing below 200 lymphocytes T CD4/mm3. It occurred that all these patients presented a low viral reservoir as measured by HIV DNA quantification (< 2,7 log copies/106 PBMC). Therefore, by targeting patients who have (1) a strong immune restoration, (2) a low HIV DNA value and (3) a very good observance, the investigators emit the hypothesis that, reductive anti retroviral strategy that would consist in changing from a conventional triple therapy towards a Nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors dual therapy, could allow for durable control of viral replication with the concomitant benefice of reduced antiretroviral side effects and cost.
Interventions during primary HIV infection (PHI) can modify the immune control and the clinical evolution during the chronic phase. Although several studies suggest the benefit of antiretroviral treatment (ART) during PHI, indication of ART is still not universally recommended. The investigators randomized patients with PHI, with a favourable immunological profile and well controlled on ART, to undergone structured treatment interruptions alone or with low doses of IL-2, stopping ART thereafter. The endpoints were immune control of HIV replication and time to resume ART. Immunological profile, specific CD4 and CD8 responses and clinical data were analysed for both groups up to 48 weeks, and during a long follow-up, up to nine years since final ART stop.
For the majority of patients, management of HIV-1 infection involves effective and well tolerated antiretroviral therapy with simplified pill load and dosing, exemplified by the availability of single tablet regimens (STRs) with single tablet once daily dosing. STR therapy has been shown to improve adherence and reduce hospitalisations (Cohen et al., 2013; Sax et al., 2012). However, the aging of the HIV cohort in Australia and globally has raised issues of increasing co-morbidities and consequent polypharmacy to manage these (Jansson & Wilson, 2012; Edelman et al., 2013). Polypharmacy may not only impact on adherence, but also increases the potential for drug-drug interactions (Holtzman et al., 2013). Stribild, a highly effective STR, contains cobicistat to boost the levels of the component integrase inhibitor, elvitegravir. Cobicistat does not have antiretroviral activity, but acts by inhibiting Cyp3A4 of the cytochrome p450 metabolic pathway. Other drugs metabolized via this pathway may be affected by this drug-drug interaction (Rogatto et al., 2014). Additionally there is evidence of increased risk of nephrotoxicity with co-administration of tenofovir and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medication (NSAIDS) (Marcotte et al., 2008). Data on use of concomitant medications in Australian patients with HIV is sparse. This study aims to determine, in a large caseload community HIV practice, the use of concomitant medications in HIV, patient pill load and dosing frequency, and potential drug-drug interactions with stribild.
End-stage liver disease, predominantly due to hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, is one of the leading causes of death in person living with HIV infection. While HCV is curable and recent advances in treatment have increased the rates of cure, few patients with HIV and HCV are being treated to cure HCV. Based on formative research, the investigators developed the "Psychosocial Readiness Evaluation and Preparation for hepatitis C treatment (PREP-C)". PREP-C is a clinical interview that healthcare providers of diverse disciplines can be trained to administer. It provides an assessment of a client's psychosocial readiness to begin HCV treatment and identifies domains of functioning which require intervention to improve treatment readiness. PREP-C (www.prepC.org) is also a telemedicine resource for health care providers. Under this protocol, the existing PREP-C clinical interview (or assessment) is incorporated with a behavioral intervention. This study tests the integrated assessment-behavioral intervention to increase HCV treatment initiation among HIV-co-infected patients. The assessment-behavioral intervention under this protocol is conducted in two phases, an Intervention Development phase and a Pilot Randomized Clinical Trial (RCT) phase. Findings from this vanguard study will inform the design parameters of a larger, more rigorous evaluation in an R01 application, if results are promising. The PREP-C web-based assessment and intervention package is designed to be scalable and can be disseminated through the live PrepC.org web site. The proposed study is innovative in that it seeks to develop the first web-based intervention for health care providers to use to increase HCV treatment initiation in HIV/HCV-co-infected persons. The study can have a major public health impact by providing needed structured resources for health care providers to increase rates of HCV treatment initiation in HIV/HCV-co-infected persons, thereby reducing mortality due to end-stage liver disease.
The Phase II trial will assess the feasibility, acceptance, safety, pathways, and initial effectiveness of a community-based combination HIV prevention intervention among bar-based female sex workers in Iringa, Tanzania. Results will inform an appropriately powered Phase III RCT as warranted.
This is an open label comparative study of tenofovir gel and film in 10 healthy sexually active women without active female genital tract disorders. The women will receive a single dose of each formulation - tenofovir gel (1%;equivalent to 40 mg in 4ml's of gel) and tenofovir film (1.3%;40 mg) - in a crossover study design to determine the pharmacokinetics of tenofovir in the blood, cervical tissue, and cervicovaginal fluid (primary objective).
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of elvitegravir/cobicistat/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide (E/C/F/TAF) in HIV-infected virologically suppressed adolescents 12 to < 18 years of age.
Background: the study aimed to explore HIV positive patients' perceptions toward illness and treatment, and their associations with demographic and clinical variables, in particular with adherence. Methods: the study was conducted at the outpatients clinic of Infectious Disease of a University Hospital in the north of Italy. Patients were asked to fill out the Illness Perception Questionnaire-Revised. Patient's adherence was measured by: viral load (HIV-RNA copies/ml) and presence at the check up.