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Clinical Trial Summary

The study is a prospective cohort study to explore the mechanisms underlying the HIV risk associated with pharmacologic doses of exogenous sex hormones via hormonal contraceptives specially progestin-containing hormonal contraception (HC). The study seeks to test that HC induce immunologic changes capable of altering HIV susceptibilities, that these effects will vary by contraceptive type, and that they will be modified by the vaginal microenvironment.


Clinical Trial Description

This study is a translational research project to explore the mechanisms underlying the HIV risk associated with pharmacologic doses of exogenous sex hormones (via hormonal contraceptives). Emerging data suggests that certain hormonal contraceptives may induce mucosal and systemic immune changes that could increase the risk of infection with HIV. While several studies have aimed to characterize immunologic changes in women using hormonal contraceptives, the nature and the magnitude of these immune changes have not been adequately defined due to limitations in study design rigor, and small and statistically underpowered sample sizes. The study will prospectively recruit cohorts of HIV-uninfected women initiating hormonal contraception to characterize systemic and lower genital tract innate and adaptive immunologic changes that occur over a course of up to 4 months. This study will test the overarching hypothesis that hormonal contraceptives induce systemic and mucosal immune changes capable of altering susceptibilities and/or responses to diseases including HIV infection, and that these effects vary markedly in nature and magnitude by contraceptive type and will be modified by the vaginal microenvironment. The main aim is to determine the immunologic alterations in female genital and systemic immune profile associated with depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA), Etonogestrel implant (Eng-Implant) and Levonorgestrel IUD (Lng-IUD). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03660046
Study type Observational
Source Emory University
Contact Alicia Smith, PhD
Phone 404-712-5006
Email alicia.smith@emory.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date December 7, 2018
Completion date September 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
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Recruiting NCT06222749 - Oxytocin and Reward Processing in Women N/A
Completed NCT02529683 - Study of Nuvaring Acceptability, Adherence and Biological Effects Among HIV-negative Women in Kenya N/A