View clinical trials related to HIV-1 Infection.
Filter by:This is a two-phase study designed to assess measures of feasibility, sustainability, acceptability, penetration, and fidelity before and after implementation of a rapid molecular HIV-1 viral load testing infrastructure at a level III health center in rural western Uganda. The central hypothesis is that implementation of PoC HIV-1 testing without accompanying modifications to clinic triage and flow, laboratory processes, and existing protocols guiding adherence counseling and regimen change, will not result in significant improvement in clinical outcomes in PLWH.
The aim of this investigation is to conduct an implementation research to facilitate and evaluate the implementation of VCT((Videoconsult through telemedicine) among HIV HCP(healthcare providers) and PLWH(people living with HIV)
The purpose of this study is to determine the safety and bioactivity of Euphorbia kansui, which has been used in traditional Chinese medicine for the treatment of edema, ascites, and asthma. The investigators previously reported that effective fractions from the dichloromethane extracts of the roots of Euphorbia kansui can reactivate latent HIV-1 replication in different latent cells (The 24th China science technology Forum-High level Forum on HIV cure, December 16-17, 2012, Beijing). Importantly, in resting CD4+ T cells of HIV-1-infected patients on suppressive antiretroviral therapy (ART), it could effectively induce ex vivo latent HIV-1 expression. Sera from rats receiving orally administered effective fractions were able to reactivate latent HIV-1. The investigators also found a substantially potent ingenol derivative EK-16A, EK-1A, EK-5A, EK-15A from Euphorbia kansui and proved that it was potent in reversing HIV-1 latency. The investigators' hypothesis is that Euphorbia kansui Pill will be safe and well-tolerated and at the doses administered, increase HIV transcription in latently-infected cells among HIV-infected patients on suppressive antiretroviral therapy.
Weight gain following antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation occurs with all modern regimens. Recent real-world reports suggest that integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INSTI)-based ART may be associated with excess weight gain compared to other regimens. Weight gain appears to occur regardless of baseline weight, and is most pronounced among women and minorities, often those at highest risk of obesity-associated comorbidities. INSTI- and TAF-based regimens are now preferred regimens for most persons according to the Department of Health and Human Services ART-Treatment Guidelines. As a result, there is an urgent need to understand the underlying mechanisms for this weight gain. This study aims to understand the changes in energy balance that occur with changes in ART. Participants with HIV who have experienced >10% weight gain on INSTI (bictegravir or dolutegravir-based therapy) will be switched to doravirine for 12 weeks, and then back to their prior INSTI regimen, allowing for assessment of changes in metabolic parameters with drug withdrawal and reintroduction (with no change to NRTI-backbone). Twenty-four hour energy balance will be measured on both regimens during a 24-hour stay using a whole room indirect calorimetry, with a standardized diet. Ultimately, the investigator's goal is to understand the mechanisms of weight gain so that future interventions can most effectively mitigate ART-associated weight changes.
HIV infection, as well as exposure to opioids (including heroin), are associated with systemic immune activation including increased microbial translocation from the gut. The overall objective of this study is to define the impact of long-term mu-opiate receptor stimulation or blockage with medication for opiate use disorder (i.e, methadone, buprenorphine/naloxone, or extended-release naltrexone) on the kinetics and extent of immune reconstitution on HIV-1 infected people who inject opiate and initiating antiretroviral therapy.
High dietary salt is associated with immune activation, elevated levels of inflammatory cytokines and hypertension in murine models. Hypertension is independently associated with inflammation in both murine studies and studies in humans. In people living with HIV, these interactions are not well established. The aim of this study is to determine the effect of excess dietary salt on immune cell activation, pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines and blood pressure between individuals with and without hypertension among people living with HIV and HIV negative persons.
In view of the prolongation of patients living with HIV's life expectancy, the question of optimization of ART, which is still a life-long treatment, becomes central. While most patients achieve virological success, their treatments often need to be optimized in order to limit adverse events, drugs interactions and to improve adherence. The switch to dual regimen strategies represent one of the approaches for treatment optimization. Circulating HIV-1 resistant variants can be archived in viral reservoirs, where they can persist for an unknown duration and reemerge in case of therapeutic selective pressure. There is a need to assess the dynamic of archived Drug resistance associated mutations (DRAMs) clearance in cell-associated HIV DNA after a long period of virological control, in the perspective of ARVs recycling. The investigators postulate that it could be interesting in the future to recycle ARV drugs (that where classified as "resistant" in the past) in subsequent regimen. The question is particularly important for 3TC/FTC for subsequent new regimen and for the use of dual regimen (disappearance of M184V). Thus, the investigators propose a retrospective, longitudinal analysis on blood-cell-associated HIV-1 DNA samples in order to investigate by Sanger and Ultra Deep Sequencing the dynamics of decay and persistence of DNA HIV-1 variants harboring key drug resistance-associated mutations to NRTIs, in particular M184V, in patients with sustained virological control for at least 5 years under effective ART.
This is a pilot study investigating the safety of Doravirine (DOR) in combination with Lamivudine (3TC) and Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate (TDF) administered over 48 weeks in women of reproductive potential living with HIV-1 switched from Efavirenz or Dolutegravir-based antiretroviral therapy on metabolic and neuropsychiatric outcomes.
This is a pilot study investigating the efficacy of Doravirine (DOR) in combination with Lamivudine (3TC) and Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate (TDF) administered over 48 weeks in adults living with HIV-1 experiencing virological failure on first-line Efavirenz-based antiretroviral therapy with non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor resistance
This is a pharmacokinetic study investigating the effect of rifampicin on the pharmacokinetics of intracellular tenofovir-diphosphate and plasma tenofovir when coadministered with tenofovir alafenamide fumarate during the maintenance phase of tuberculosis treatment in TB/HIV-1 coinfected participants (EpiTAF)