View clinical trials related to Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes.
Filter by:Treatment Study to assess of safety and efficiency of T cells receptor (TCR) alfa beta depleted graft for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) from haploidentical and unrelated donors in patients with primary immunodeficiency diseases
This study is designed to see how HIV infected patients perform when taking a single fixed dose HIV medication compared to a regimen with multiple tablets. The study is also going to be looking at the differences in complications between the two groups.
Non-Interventional Study on the Tolerability and Efficacy of octagam® 10%
This is a double-blinded, randomized controlled trial of 200 HIV-infected pregnant women living in Tororo, Uganda, an area of high malaria transmission. HIV-infected pregnant women between 12 and 28 weeks gestation will be randomized to receive enhanced malaria chemoprevention with monthly dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DP) versus monthly DP placebo. Their HIV-exposed children will receive the same prevention regimen from 2 to 24 months of age to which the mothers were randomized. All women will receive daily trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TS) throughout the study per Uganda Ministry of Health guidelines. Children will also receive daily TS from 6 weeks to 24 months of age. TS will be considered a study drug only in infants and children beginning 6 weeks after cessation of breastfeeding and upon exclusion of HIV infection. Women and their children will be followed for 36 months after delivery. In a subset of the study population, the investigators will conduct an intensive pharmacokinetic study that will evaluate pharmacokinetic exposure of DP and EFV. The investigators will also measure HIV-related outcomes among the women enrolled in the study. The investigators will test the hypothesis that for HIV-infected mothers and HIV-exposed infants, that enhanced versus standard malaria chemoprevention in HIV-infected pregnant women and their children will reduce the incidence of malaria among children from 0 to 24 months of age and improve the development of naturally acquired antimalarial immunity.
This is a Phase II trial to determine the ability of a reduced intensity conditioning regimen to allow successful engraftment with CD3+ /CD19+ depleted peripheral stem cell grafts from mismatched donors. There are two conditioning regimens depending upon patient diagnosis and age.
This is an open-label, single sequence, 2-cohort, drug-drug interaction study in healthy male and female subjects. There is no formal hypothesis, however, it is expected that the coadministration of BMS-663068 with darunavir (DRV)/cobicistat (COBI) or COBI will increase the systemic exposure of BMS-626529.
The purpose of this study is to assess the impact of a light meal, a standard meal, and a high fat meal on the PK of BMS-955176 MC tablet at a dose of 180 mg, relative to fasted conditions.
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate non-inferiority in efficacy while switching to a once-daily single-tablet regimen containing darunavir (DRV)/ cobicistat (COBI)/ emtricitabine (FTC)/ tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) (D/C/F/TAF tablet) relative to continuing the current regimen consisting of a boosted protease inhibitor (bPI) combined with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (FTC/TDF) in virologically-suppressed (human immunodeficiency virus type 1 ribonucleic acid [HIV-1 RNA] concentrations less than [<] 50 copies per milliliter [copies/mL]) HIV-1 infected participants.
Phase 3 multicenter, open-label study of safety, tolerability, efficacy, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of ProMetic's Immune Globulin Intravenous (Human) 10%, the investigational medicinal product [IMP]), in Adults and Children with Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases (PIDD).
The purpose of this study is to determine the risk factors associated with the occurrence of arterial insufficiency in patients with HIV / AIDS, and to identify the prevalence of this disease. The estimated prevalence is 10%, similar to that reported in the general population.