View clinical trials related to HIV.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to conduct a prospective, three-group study that randomly assigns 700 parolees, in a community residential drug treatment program, to enter one of three groups: 1) a PCPC (Parolee Comprehensive Care + Phone Coaching Program), which includes nurse case management and specialized hepatitis education sessions and the hepatitis A/B (HAV/HBV) vaccination series (to all eligible) and coach-facilitated mentoring (mostly by cell-phone); 2) a Parolee Brief Hepatitis Education + HBV vaccination + Phone Coaching (PBCP) Program, which includes brief hepatitis/HIV education, HAV/HBV vaccination and coach-facilitated mentoring; or 3) a Usual Care (UC) control program, which includes brief general health information, one-on-one coaching and the HAV/HBV vaccine.
The study will measure the incidence of moderate and severe adverse events (AEs) associated with PrePex procedures among 500 men, including both procedural and post-procedure events, and all device-related incidents such as dislodgment. To assure complete ascertainment of AEs, study-specific forms will be used to collect standardized data from the circumcision visit and all follow-up visits. Follow-up will be more intensive for the first 50 cases, and will transition to follow-up at two visits (7 and 42 days) for the remaining 450 cases.
The purpose of the study is to look at the levels of an HIV medication (raltegravir) in the blood, and how it is affected if raltegravir is taken at the same time as another medicine for high blood pressure (amlodipine). Many patients with HIV will also have high blood pressure, so it is important to know which drugs for each of these conditions can be taken together without affecting how well they work individually. Over a 3 week period, participants took amlodipine for 2 weeks, and raltegravir for 2 weeks, with the middle week being on both drugs. The investigators will look at and compare the levels of these two drugs in the blood after subjects have taken them separately and both together. This study is randomised into two groups with both study medications received by all participants in a three-period crossover pattern; randomisation determined which medication was taken first. Once randomised allocation was performed, medications were administered in an open-label fashion.
This research examines the effectiveness of an intervention that employs seek, test, and treat strategies for Vietnamese injection drug users (IDU) and their network members, by ensuring that high risk individuals are sought for HIV testing and promptly referred to and maintained on antiretroviral therapy (ART). HIV prevention interventions are provided to IDUs who test HIV-negative, as well as those who test HIV-positive. HIV-positive IDUs will be referred to HIV care through a two-arm randomized controlled trial to compare the effects of different levels of engagement in care on ART uptake, ART adherence, and treatment outcome.
The use of lubiprostone will decrease the levels of immune activation in HIV-infected subjects with incomplete CD4+ T-cell recovery with antiretroviral therapy (ART). - Lubiprostone will decrease levels of translocated gut microbial products in HIV-infected subjects with incomplete CD4+ T-cell recovery with ART. - The decrease in levels of translocated gut microbial products will be associated with a decline in the levels of immune activation in HIV-infected subjects with incomplete CD4+ T-cell recovery with ART.
A rapid and almost complete loss of CD4+ T cells from the gut associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) occurs early in HIV infection, with a permanent damage in the intestinal barrier, changes in gut microbiota, increased bacterial translocation and persistent immune activation, changes that are not restored after the initiation of antiretroviral therapy. The investigators hypothesize than an intervention targetting the enterocyte barrier and the gut microbiota might modify the gastrointestinal tract towards a bifidogenic microbiota and improve markers of bacterial translocation, inflammation, immune activation and endothelial dysfunction.
The purpose of this study is to assess the effectiveness and tolerability of hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment in HIV co-infected patients in routine health care services in Asia through a pilot model of care for treatment of HCV in resource-limited settings.
The goals of the proposed study are to: 1) test whether small, increasing cash payments to HIV-infected pregnant women, on the condition that they attend scheduled clinic visits and receive proposed services, will increase the proportion of women who receive the most effective antiretroviral regimen they are eligible for by the time of delivery, and 2) elucidate factors that facilitate or inhibit the uptake and adherence to the PMTCT cascade, and to what extent the conditional cash payment program addresses these factors. This intervention will be implemented and evaluated within our well-established PMTCT program in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC),
Young men who have sex with men (YMSM) account for almost 70% of HIV diagnoses among all young people in the U.S. and are alone in facing an increasing rate of infections. Because YMSM are less likely to receive relevant sexual health education in traditional settings (e.g. schools, community), the Internet is a unique route of reaching and helping YMSM. The purpose of this study is to compare two different versions of an online HIV prevention program for YMSM. The study is being conducted by researchers at Northwestern University in Chicago, Hunter College in New York City, and Emory University in Atlanta. A total of 900 YMSM will be enrolled into this study from the clinics of community partners in Chicago, New York, and Atlanta. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two versions of the program. Some topics in the program include HIV facts and myths, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), and condom use. All participants, regardless of the program version they receive, will also take at-home urine and rectal tests for the STIs chlamydia and gonorrhea. After completing the program, participants will be contacted three more times over the course of a year for follow-up sessions and surveys. The research team hypothesizes that the YMSM-specific prevention program will lead to a significant reduction in the frequency of unprotected anal sex acts and new STI infections compared to the HIV knowledge program that is for a general audience. The YMSM-specific program will also lead to improvements in secondary knowledge, motivation, and skills outcomes. In order for the research team to measure the effectiveness of the YMSM-specific prevention program and determine if the study hypothesis is correct, participants will be asked questions about themselves, including questions about their sexual orientation, sexual experiences, health practices, including drug use, health knowledge, and questions about their feelings and emotions. Based on this information, the research team hopes to later change, improve, or expand the program to better address the needs of YMSM.
To find out if it is possible for HIV-1 patients to maintain antiretroviral medications during allogeneic bone marrow transplant