View clinical trials related to HIV-1 Infection.
Filter by:This is an open-label, single arm, single-centre prospective study to evaluate the feasibility, efficacy and safety of a once daily fixed dose combination regimen, Biktarvy, as a rapid treatment strategy in newly HIV diagnosed patients that come for the first time to the Hospital Clínic HIV Unit Patients with confirmed HIV-1 diagnosis who wish to start ARV treatment immediately will receive bictegravir 50 mg + emtricitabine 200 mg + tenofovir alafenamide 25 mg within the first week since the HIV-1 confirmation during 48 weeks.
The purpose of this phase III study is to evaluate the efficacy between treatments (UB-421 Arm vs. Placebo Arm) by measuring the proportion of subjects with reduction in HIV-1 RNA viral load.
This is a Phase II, randomized, open-label, multi-center, active-controlled study to assess the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of UB-421 administered as an add-on to the standard ART in ART-treated HIV-1 subjects with stably suppressed HIV-1 plasma VL. The study will be conducted at multiple study centers, designated AIDS hospitals in China.
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the effectiveness of Symtuza® in a rapid reinitiation model of care in patients with HIV-1 infection and who are treatment-experienced but have been off of antiretroviral therapy (ART) for 12 or more weeks.
The AELIX-002 trial has been conducted on a cohort of individuals who started cART within the first 6 months after the primary VIH infection, thus increasing the likelihood of observing a certain rate of post-treatment controls (PTC), regardless of treatment efficacy. Although the kinetics of HIV rebound should allow observing differences between placebo and control regarding the post treatment controls rate in case of efficacy of the IMPs, assessing the length and determinants of a post-intervention control (PIC) (i.e., associated with vaccination) beyond 24 weeks is crucial for developing a curative approach to HIV infection. In this regard, an extension of the ATI phase for those individuals with pVL less than 2,000 copies/mL after 24 weeks of ATI in the AELIX-002 offers an unique research opportunity to better understand relevant aspects of the mechanisms involved in the different phenotypes of a PIC and PTC.
CORIA is an observational cohort study of immunosuppressed populations who test positive for COVID-19. This includes people living with HIV, cancer, acquired immunodeficiency associated with other immunosuppressive therapy, primary immunodeficiency and recipients of a solid organ transplant. Participants will have routine clinical data collected with optional baseline collection and storage of a blood sample for storage . The study will be conducted in up to 30 sites within Australia.
This study seeks to determine the clinical efficacy and cost effectiveness of implementing an integrated model for HIV monitoring using point of care (POC) tenofovir (TFV) adherence testing and POC viral load (VL) monitoring in improving ART adherence, maintaining durable VL suppression, and improving retention in care among HIV-positive individuals initiating first-line tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF)-based ART in South Africa.
The goal of the study is to combine a collaborative and translational approach to evaluate the effect antiretroviral regimen switch to a dolutegravir containing regimen compared to continued treatment with a non- dolutegravir based regimen on on lipid and metabolic profiles, renal function, body composition, vascular function and diet.
This study is composed of two parallel, pilot randomized groups that will obtain preliminary data about the the acceptability, fidelity, and clinical outcomes associated with a multi-component adherence support strategy for HIV treatment and prevention among pregnant and breastfeeding women. The study will take place in Lilongwe, Malawi.
This randomized trial compares the efficacy of switching to a fixed-dose combination of B/F/TAF versus continuing a boosted protease inhibitor (bPI) regimen in HIV-1 infected participants who are virologically suppressed (HIV-1 RNA <200 copies) on a second-line bPI regimen. Half of participants will receive B/F/TAF and half will continue a bPI regimen. The hypothesize is that B/F/TAF will have efficacy that is non-inferior to the boosted PI regimen.