View clinical trials related to HIV-1 Infection.
Filter by:HOLA is a prospective, randomized (1:1), hybrid type (implementation-effectiveness), phase IV, double arm, open label, multicentric study including virologically suppressed HIVinfected subjects who start or are currently under treatment with the LA antiretroviral combination CAB+RPV, to evaluate the out-of-hospital administration of this combination in terms of acceptability, appropriateness, feasibility and satisfaction.
This is a randomized open-label trial to examine the safety and immunogenicity of INO-6160 (synthetic DNAs encoding a native-like HIV Env Trimer and Interleukin-12), alone or in a prime-boost regimen with VRC HIV Env Trimer 4571 adjuvanted with 3M-052-AF + Alum. The primary hypothesis is that the vaccine regimen will elicit HIV-1 envelope protein-specific binding antibody (Ab) and T-cell responses
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of a drug called semaglutide and to see whether it can reduce IHTG. IHTG will be measured by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI; an MRI machine contains a powerful magnet that uses simple radio waves to take pictures of organs). Semaglutide (brand name Ozempic®) is a drug that is used to treat people who have diabetes; it also causes weight loss and may provide some protection against cardiovascular disease and diabetes. In PLWH, the use of semaglutide to reduce weight and the level of IHTG are experimental.
The primary objectives of this study are to evaluate the safety and tolerability of a switch to Doravirine/Islatravir (DOR/ISL) compared with continued baseline antiretroviral therapy (ART), through Week 48; and to evaluate the antiretroviral activity of a switch to DOR/ISL compared with continued baseline ART at Week 48. The primary hypothesis is that DOR/ISL is non-inferior to continued baseline ART, as assessed by the percentage of participants with HIV-1 ribonucleic acid (RNA) ≥50 copies/mL at Week 48, with a margin of 4 percentage points used to define non-inferiority.
The study is being conducted to determine if cenicriviroc mesylate (CVC) will decrease vascular inflammation as measured by 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) imaging of the aorta.
The primary objectives of this study are to evaluate the antiretroviral activity of a switch to DOR/ISL compared with continued BIC/FTC/TAF at Week 48; and to evaluate the safety and tolerability of a switch to DOR/ISL compared with continued BIC/FTC/TAF, through Week 48. The primary hypotheses are that (1) DOR/ISL is non-inferior to continued BIC/FTC/TAF, as assessed by the percentage of participants with HIV-1 ribonucleic acid (RNA) ≥50 copies/mL at Week 48, with a margin of 4 percentage points used to define non-inferiority; and (2) DOR/ISL is superior to BIC/FTC/TAF, as assessed by the percentage of participants with HIV-1 RNA ≥50 copies/mL at Week 48.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of CABENUVA (Long-acting Cabotegravir Plus Long-acting Rilpivirine) in patients with HIV infection and severe renal impairment. This study is considered research and is voluntary.
Master protocol: The goal of this master clinical trial study is to learn how novel antiretrovirals (medicines that stop the virus from multiplying) affect the human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) infection in people living with HIV (PWH). Substudy-01 (GS-US-544-5905-01) will evaluate bavtavirine in PWH. Substudy-02 (GS-US-544-5905-02) will evaluate GS-1720 in PWH. Substudy-03 (GS-US-544-5905-03) will evaluate GS-6212 in PWH.
Phase IV, open-label, single arm, unicenter and pilot study on virologically suppressed HIV infected adults with ETR resistance, to assess the efficacy of a Switch strategy from Etravirine (ETR) to Doravirine (DOR).
The clinical study is designed to evaluate the ability of two priming vaccine regimens to activate and induce the maturation of cross-reactive CD4 binding site (CD4-bs) antibodies, including VRC01-class antibodies. VRC01- class antibodies are highly desirable to elicit via vaccination because they have broad cover all clades of HIV and passive administration of VRC01 monoclonal antibodies has been demonstrated to prevent acquisition of susceptible HIV strains in clinical trials. The study will assess whether B cells expressing VRC01-like B cell receptors proliferate following immunization with a 'germline-targeting' recombinant Env immunogen. The study will also test whether an immunization strategy based upon fractionated dose delivery of the immunogen may improve the maturation of VRC01-class B cells when compared to traditional bolus dosing. In addition, the study will test whether alterations in the dose of the subsequent boost immunizations affects VRC01-class B cell activation and the rate of antibody affinity maturation.