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Human Immunodeficiency Virus clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Human Immunodeficiency Virus.

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NCT ID: NCT05623800 Completed - Clinical trials for Human Immunodeficiency Virus

HIV Education Kit for Adolescents (Pencegahan HIV di Kalangan Remaja), PREM-Kit

PREM-Kit
Start date: March 31, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this community trial is to provide HIV education based on the newly developed HIV education kit (PREM-Kit) and evaluate the knowledge, attitude and practices related to HIV prevention among the late adolescents (aged 18 to 19 years old) in Malaysia. The main question it aims to answer is does the PREM-Kit improve the knowledge, attitude and practices related to HIV prevention among the adolescent? Participants will be asked to: - answer a questionnaire as a baseline screening to determine their knowledge, attitude and practices related to HIV prevention. - Using PREM-Kit, they will participate in a series of health education sessions. There will be three sessions in total which will be delivered two weekly apart. Each of the sessions will take approximately 20 minutes duration. - Following the last session (third session), participants will have to answer the same questionnaire ; once immediately after the last session, once at 3-months post-intervention, and lastly, at 4-months post-intervention. Researchers will compare participants who received the existing Basic Science and Biology module to see if there is any improvement in the knowledge, attitude and practices related to HIV prevention.

NCT ID: NCT05503680 Completed - Clinical trials for Human Immunodeficiency Virus

The Effect of Yoga for Stress Among HIV Patients in Indonesia

Start date: August 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is aimed to evaluate the effects of yoga intervention versus usual care (control group) for reducing stress among people living with HIV in Indonesia.

NCT ID: NCT05494736 Completed - Clinical trials for Human Immunodeficiency Virus

MK-8527 Single-Dose Trial in HIV-1 Infected Participants (MK-8527-004)

Start date: November 17, 2022
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This is a single-dose clinical study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and anti-retroviral activity of MK-8527 in antiretroviral therapy (ART)-naïve participants with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection. The primary hypothesis is that, at a dose that is safe and generally well tolerated, MK-8527 will have antiretroviral activity as measured by a reduction from baseline in plasma HIV-1 ribonucleic acid (RNA) of ≥1.0 log10 copies/mL.

NCT ID: NCT05343390 Completed - Clinical trials for Human Immunodeficiency Virus

Package of Resources for Assisted Contact Tracing: Implementation, Costs, and Effectiveness

PRACTICE
Start date: November 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Having health workers assist HIV-infected persons with the recruitment and testing of their sexual contacts and biological children is an effective and efficient way of identifying additional HIV-infected persons in need of HIV treatment and HIV-uninfected persons in need of HIV prevention. However, in Malawi, a country with a generalized HIV epidemic, health workers lack the counseling and coordination skills to routinely assist their HIV-infected clients with these services. This study will determine how to help health workers to effectively and efficiently provide these services to their patients through a set of digital capacity-building tools.

NCT ID: NCT05100758 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Active Hexose Correlated Compound in Tuberculosis-HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) Infection

Start date: October 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background Active Hexose Correlated Compound is assumed to have a positive effect on immunity, including induce a phagocytic response, reduce tumor resistance, and cytokine response including interferon-gamma and interleukins. Tuberculosis patients with concurrent Human immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) might have benefit when receiving active hexose compound during tuberculosis treatment Purposes 1. To assess the clinical changes of patients who receive active hexose compound as an adjuvant to tuberculosis therapy in patients with HIV 2. To assess the difference of pro-inflammatory cytokines between standard therapy and active hexose compound adjuvant Methods A clinical trial involving patients with Tuberculosis-HIV infection Hypothesis 1. Clinical improvement is significantly different where the group who receive active compound will have the better clinical outcome 2. Lower proinflammatory cytokines are observed in people who receive active compound

NCT ID: NCT05065905 Completed - Clinical trials for Human Immunodeficiency Virus

Study of Interferon-Gamma in the Complex Treatment of Patients Infected With HIV and Tuberculosis

MSPB_TB
Start date: January 19, 2006
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The primary purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of interferon-gamma by subcutaneous injection in complex treatment of patients with co-infection of HIV and pulmonary tuberculosis and to determine the rational of its use.

NCT ID: NCT04805112 Completed - Clinical trials for Human Immunodeficiency Virus

Acceptability, Feasibility and Impact of Oral HIV Self-testing for Partner Testing Among Kenyan Adolescent Girls Aged 15-19 Years: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Start date: March 2, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This randomized controlled trial will assess the feasibility, acceptability and impact of the provision of multiple oral-fluid based HIV self-test kits to HIV-negative adolescents aged 15-19 years to promote HIV testing among their sexual partners and couples testing.

NCT ID: NCT04772469 Completed - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

Self-Test Strategies and Linkage Incentives to Improve ART and PrEP Uptake in Men

Start date: March 22, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a randomized controlled trial to test a combination behavioral and biomedical interventions to improve the HIV prevention and care cascades in a population of mobile men in a high priority setting (fishermen in Kenya). The intervention strategy is to recruit and train highly socially-connected men to distribute HIV self-tests and provide linkage support to men in their close social networks. The study will determine whether this social network-based approach along with small financial incentives in the form of transport vouchers can increase men's self-testing, linkage to and uptake of ART and PrEP after self-testing, virologic suppression at 6 months (for those initiating ART) and PrEP adherence (for those initiating PrEP) at 6 months. The study includes a longitudinal qualitative and mixed methods (quantitative and qualitative assessments) to identify the pathways of intervention action, and understand how the social network-based approach with support for linkage affects testing and ART and PrEP uptake and retention in men.

NCT ID: NCT04653194 Completed - Clinical trials for Human Immunodeficiency Virus

Efficacy of BIC/F/TAF Versus Standard of Care in the Treatment of New HIV Infection Diagnoses in the Context of 'Test and Treat'

BIC-T&T
Start date: September 30, 2020
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The administration of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) to HIV-infected patients has been associated with a dramatic reduction in AIDS-related morbidity and mortality. Time to cART start is currently approximately 2-4 weeks after diagnosis, mostly deferred for reasons of waiting for baseline blood test results; in particular HIV genotype, CD4 count, OI screen and logistics of a consultant clinical review. Whilst there is a clear rationale for this delay there is a risk of loss to follow-up as well as the potential risk of onward viral transmission. The balance between "readiness" to start ART against pragmatic and practical safe initiation of treatment needs to be tested using currently available safe potent antiretroviral agents in a head-to-head comparison study to allow careful rigorous comparisons of outcomes. This study will recruit 36 newly diagnosed HIV patients to be started on treatment immediately upon diagnosis. This would optimally be within 7 days, for eligibility to the study up to 14 days will be permissible. Patients will be randomised to one of two open-label combination therapies known to be highly effective; Biktarvy or Symtuza. The patients will receive study treatment for 48 weeks. The two therapies will be compared by the change in HIV viral load from start of treatment to 12 weeks. Further clinical data will be recorded for the trial patients and exploratory investigations undertaken. As those recruited to the trial may not be representative of the full cohort of newly diagnosed HIV patients there will also be data collected on all newly diagnosed patients in a given period. This data will contribute to conclusions on the benefits and issues of implementing test and treat.

NCT ID: NCT04598958 Completed - Clinical trials for Human Immunodeficiency Virus

A Multidisciplinary "Integrated Management Team to Improve Maternal-Child Outcomes (IMPROVE)" Intervention to Improve Maternal and Child Outcomes in Lesotho

IMPROVE
Start date: July 27, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to improve maternal and child health (MCH) outcomes by implementing and evaluating a multidisciplinary "Integrated Management Team to Improve Maternal-Child Outcomes (IMPROVE)" intervention to increase MCH, antiretroviral therapy (ART), and HIV services uptake and retention in Lesotho. The proposed intervention will focus efforts to improve the effectiveness of existing village health workers (VHW) and HIV support organizations (Lesotho Network of AIDS Service Organizations [LENASO] and Mothers2Mothers [M2M]) based at the facility and coordination between the facility and community. The IMPROVE intervention includes: (1) Multidisciplinary integrated management teams to coordinate patient-focused and outcome-oriented PMTCT and MCH services; (2) Enhanced Positive Health, Dignity, and Prevention (PHDP)-focused counseling and skills-building training and job aids; and (3) Increased early community-based counseling and support for first (antenatal care clinic) ANC attendees with particular attention to HIV-positive women to minimize loss to follow-up. The study will be a cluster randomized design with facilities randomized to receive the IMPROVE intervention or routine services offering the national standard of care. A cohort of HIV-positive and HIV-negative pregnant women will be enrolled and prospectively followed every three months through pregnancy and until the participant's child reaches 24 months of age. The primary HIV objectives will be to evaluate the effect of the intervention on retention in HIV care, viral suppression, adherence to ART in HIV-positive women, and HIV retesting in HIV-negative women. The investigators will also assess the effect of the IMPROVE intervention on general MCH indices including antenatal care (ANC) attendance, facility delivery, family planning, and immunization coverage. Secondary objectives include evaluation of adherence self-efficacy (HIV positive) or prevention self-efficacy (HIV negative), depression and stigma as well as disclosure, knowledge of partner status, and identification of discordant couples in intervention versus control facilities. Analysis of the cost-effectiveness of the IMPROVE intervention will also be conducted. In addition, qualitative interviews and focus group discussions will be conducted with study women, health care workers (HCW), LENASO, and VHWs to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of integrating this intervention into routine care.