View clinical trials related to HIV Drug Resistance.
Filter by:The current therapy regimens in Sub-Saharan countries, consisting of standardized first and second line drug combinations, yield a high rate of treatment failure, even within the first 12 months of therapy (23). These and other facts hint at the need for HIV resistance testing to improve treatment outcomes in resource-limited settings, but no prospective clinical data about this intervention exists. The proposed study aims to evaluate the impact of HIV drug resistance testing, and subsequent change to an individualized (second-line) therapy based on the resistance profile, in Tanzanian patients (children, adolescents and adults) with virological failure of their first-line and second-line therapy. Additionally, prevalence, patterns and clinical impact of HIVDR will be assessed, as well as the effect of enhanced adherence counselling. The results of this study will help doctors to take evidence-based diagnostic and therapeutic decisions at an individual level, and will inform policy-makers in their decisions about future treatment and management concepts for HIV/AIDS.
The investigators aim to assess type and frequency of HIV drug resistance in adults presenting to the Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI) in Kampala, Uganda, and compare this data to patients from the Swiss HIV Cohort Study (SHCS). This study is a single-site, cross-sectional study. The Investigators' goal is to perform viral load measurements in 2750 HIV-infected patients who have been on ART for 6 months or more. Presuming a detectable viral load in 10%, resistance testing would then be performed in 250 patients on ART. All adult patients attending will be screened for enrollment. Furthermore, the investigators' goal is to perform resistance testing in 250 ART naive patients in order to detect transmitted resistance mutations. Investigators will therefore consecutively screen and enroll 250 ART naive patients who attend the clinic during the study period. For each participant, a case report form (CRF) form will be completed which includes social, as well as medical information. Investigators will ask each participant for permission to store plasma in case resistance testing must be repeated, and serum, in case of future research questions.