Clinical Trials Logo

Filter by:
  • Not yet recruiting  
  • Page [1] ·  Next »
NCT ID: NCT06449196 Not yet recruiting - HIV Clinical Trials

Mosaic HIV-1 Envelope Trimer Immunogens Administered to People Living With HIV (PLWH) in Africa

C112
Start date: August 1, 2024
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

An Experimental Medicine Vaccine Trial of Mosaic HIV-1 Envelope Trimer Immunogens Administered to People Living with HIV (PLWH) in Africa, Randomized for Assessment of Fractional Doses.

NCT ID: NCT06408857 Not yet recruiting - Healthy Volunteers Clinical Trials

Study To Evaluate Safety, Tolerability, and Pharmacokinetics of MAM01 in African Population

Start date: September 2024
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This study will test a new drug (MAM01) to find which doses are safe and could help prevent people from getting malaria. The study will take place in parts of Africa where malaria is common. Parts A and B of the study will first test single doses of MAM01 in healthy adults, then after safety review, in older children, and then after additional safety review, in infants. Part C will then test single doses of MAM01 in children and infants who have a medical problem that could put them at greater risk if they get malaria.

NCT ID: NCT06366386 Not yet recruiting - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Integrating Hypertension Management in DSD for HIV

HTN-DSD
Start date: June 15, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this implementation science study is to design evidence based and stakeholder informed implementation strategies to integrate the management of hypertension (HTN) into existing community anti-retro-viral treatment (ART) delivery models of HIV care in Uganda and evaluate their effectiveness and implementation outcomes. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. What are the perspectives of patients (hypertensive PLHIV) on integrating hypertension care in community ART delivery models of HIV care? 2. What are the perspectives of health care providers', district leaders', and policymakers' perspectives on integrating hypertension care in community ART delivery models of HIV care? 3. What implementation strategies would support integration of the management of hypertension into existing community ART delivery models in Uganda? 4. What is the effectiveness of implementation strategies to integrate the management of hypertension care in community ART delivery models of HIV care in Uganda? 5. What are the implementation outcomes of strategies to integrate hypertension care in community ART delivery models of HIV care in Uganda? 6. What is the cumulative incidence, types and severity of HTN medication-related adverse events and their predictors among PLHIV with HTN? Investigators will use qualitative research methods to explore key stakeholders' perspectives and preferences on integrating hypertension care in community ART delivery models in Uganda; design implementation strategies that integrate the management of hypertension into existing community ART delivery models; determine the effectiveness of implementation strategies that integrate the management of hypertension in community ART delivery models; evaluate implementation outcomes of strategies that integrate hypertension care in community ART delivery models; determine the cumulative incidence, types and severity of medication-related adverse events and their predictors; and assess the patients and provider costs, health related quality of life, cost-effectiveness of leveraging existing HIV differentiated service delivery models to screen and treat HTN among persons with HIV in Uganda.

NCT ID: NCT06347471 Not yet recruiting - Falciparum; Malaria Clinical Trials

The Transmission of Artemisinin Resistant Parasites Before and After Conventional Artemisinin-combination Therapy

SPARTAN
Start date: April 2024
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

A prospective study will be carried out in an area where parasites with reduced sensitivity to malaria drugs (artemisinins) have recently emerged. The study will recruit participants from patients who attend the clinic with uncomplicated malaria and are treated with conventional artemisinin-combination therapies (ACT) as part of standard clinical care. From this population, we will select P. falciparum gametocyte carriers. Before, during and after ACT treatment, the transmission potential of artemisinin resistant and wild type infections will be assessed by microscopy, molecular methods, parasite culture and mosquito feeding assays. Parasite clearance will be determined in the first days (d0-3) after treatment. The study population will consist of passively recruited patients with uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria who are microscopy positive for gametocytes. Participants will be treated with conventional therapies for uncomplicated malaria without randomization: artemether-lumefantrine (AL) or dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DHA-PPQ). All doses are supervised. Parasite clearance is assessed ex vivo by ring-stage survival assays and by daily slides during the first days of treatment. Gametocyte carriage and gametocyte commitment/production will be determined for resistant and wild type infections before, during and after treatment. In addition, venous blood will be collected at three timepoints to assess transmission to mosquitoes before (d0), during (d2) and after treatment (d7). The total duration of participation will be 7 days, the primary endpoint will be the reduction in mosquito infection rates at d2 (artemether-lumefantrine) or d7 (dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine) compared to pre-treatment.

NCT ID: NCT06253715 Not yet recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Shortened Regimen for Drug-susceptible TB in Children

SMILE-TB
Start date: September 30, 2024
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

While drug-susceptible tuberculosis (TB) disease in children currently requires four to six months of treatment, most children may be able to be cured with a shorter treatment of more powerful drugs. Shorter treatment may be easier for children to tolerate and finish as well as ease caregiver strain from managing treatment side effects and supporting children over many months. The primary objective of this study is to evaluate if a 2-month regimen (including isoniazid (H), rifapentine (P), pyrazinamide (Z) and moxifloxacin (M)) is as safe and effective as a 4- to 6-month regimen (isoniazid, rifampicin (R), pyrazinamide, ethambutol (E)) in curing drug-susceptible TB disease in children under 10 years old. The study is also evaluating the safety of the HPZM in children with and without HIV.

NCT ID: NCT06212570 Not yet recruiting - Abdominal Neoplasm Clinical Trials

KeyScope Study in Uganda

Start date: January 1, 2025
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

KeyScope and KeyLoop (collectively called KeySuite) are laparoscopic prototypes that the investigators have designed for the resources, needs and challenges of low- and middle- income countries (LMICs). KeyScope is a laparoscope that plugs into a laptop computer to display images during surgery. It links to a telementoring application so that experienced surgeons can mentor surgeons in capacity-building partnerships. KeyLoop is a laparoscopic retractor that lifts the abdominal wall during surgery, obviating the need for a constant power supply and medical-grade carbon dioxide. The investigators will perform a clinical First-in-Human study at the Uganda Cancer Institute. Ugandan surgeons will use the KeySuite devices to perform biopsies of intra-abdominal tumors.

NCT ID: NCT06205056 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Human Immunodeficiency Virus

Evaluation of Safety and Immunogenicity of Ad26.Mos4.HIV and CH505 TF chTrimer Combination in Healthy Adults

RV591
Start date: January 2024
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This is a Phase I, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical study to define the safety and immunogenicity resulting from a rapid dose-escalating vaccination schedule as compared to that of a co-administered, dose-consistent vaccination schedule. Participants randomized to receive vaccines will get either dose-consistent injections of CH505 TF chTrimer+ALFQ co-administered with Ad26.Mos4.HIV or rapid, dose-escalating injections of CH505 TF chTrimer+ALFQ with an Ad26.Mos4.HIV prime, followed by dose-consistent injection of CH505 TF chTrimer+ALFQ co-administered with Ad26.Mos4.HIV

NCT ID: NCT06192160 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Trial of Novel Regimens for the Treatment of Pulmonary Tuberculosis

RAD-TB
Start date: September 15, 2024
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

A5409/RAD-TB is an adaptive Phase 2 randomized, controlled, open-label, dose-ranging, platform protocol to evaluate the safety and efficacy of multidrug regimens for the treatment of adults with drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis (TB). A5409 hypothesizes that novel regimens for the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis will result in superior early efficacy, as determined by longitudinal mycobacteria growth indicator tube (MGIT) liquid culture time to positivity (TTP) measurements over the first 6 weeks of treatment, and will have acceptable safety and tolerability over 8 weeks of treatment relative to standard of care [(SOC) isoniazid/rifampicin/pyrazinamide/ethambutol (HRZE)]. The study will run for 52 weeks, inclusive of 26 weeks of TB treatment comprised of 8 weeks of experimental or SOC treatment (based on treatment arm assignment) followed by 18 weeks of SOC treatment with 45 participants in each experimental treatment arm and at least 90 participants in the SOC arm.

NCT ID: NCT06169514 Not yet recruiting - Pneumonia Clinical Trials

Health Systems and Policy Contexts of Medical Oxygen

MOXY-HSP
Start date: July 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a mixed-methods program evaluation from a health systems and policy perspective, involving (i) stakeholder analysis, (ii) policy-implementation gap analysis, and (iii) comparative country case studies. This study aims to understand how national oxygen strategies achieve impact at national, and subnational level, across country contexts, at what cost. The the investigators seek to: 1. Involve policymakers, implementers (including private sector), and medical oxygen users in identifying challenges and understanding potential solutions to medical oxygen access; 2. Generate new data on how medical oxygen systems work and can be improved from multiple perspectives; 3. Draw lessons on medical oxygen that can directly inform national and global practice and policy. This study will be conducted in 6 of the 9 countries participating in the Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI) led Medical Oxygen Implementation (MOXY) program (Uganda, Nigeria, Rwanda, Liberia, Lao PDR, Cambodia). Key informants will be selected representing government, non-governmental agencies, professional associations, private sector, and civil society. This study will be completed over 4 years, with timelines varying between country study sites.

NCT ID: NCT06134362 Not yet recruiting - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

Long-term Follow-up of Long-acting Cabotegravir (CAB LA) for PrEP (Pre-exposure Prophylaxis) in Participants at Risk of Acquiring HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus)

PALISADE
Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is long-term evaluation of long-acting injectable cabotegravir (CAB LA) for HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in eligible participants who have completed DAIDS (Division of AIDS) sponsored studies HPTN 083 and HPTN 084 and associated sub-studies. Participants will continue receiving CAB LA and be followed for new HIV diagnosis, SAEs (serious adverse events), Grade 3 and Grade 4 ISRs (injection site reactions), and AEs (adverse events) leading to withdrawal.