View clinical trials related to HIV Seropositivity.
Filter by:To evaluate the anti-interference and specificity of HIV Ag +Ab Assay Kit (Sysmex) for the detection of HIV antigens and antibodies.
This is a dual arm (arm 1 and arm 2) multi-centric non-randomized (prospective) study. Two new multicentric cohorts will be set up in 4 Belgian HIV reference centers (UZ Gent, UZ Brussel, University Hospital Liege and St. Pierre Hospital Brussels): cohort 1 will comprise PLWH in whom ART was initiated during acute HIV infection minimum 3 years ago but no more than 10 years ago (short-term ART cohort); cohort 2 will comprise PLWH on ART since >20 years (long-term ART cohort). Participants will be included based on suppressed viremia and uninterrupted ART since initiation. Participants will undergo one blood sampling and one leukapheresis. In and exclusion criteria are described below.
In our formative research, analysis of antiretroviral treatment (ART) data manually entered in the Three Interlinked Electronic Registers (TIER.Net) showed poor viral load monitoring (VLM) and inadequate management of virological failure in HIV-positive patients on ART in rural KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. ART interruption was high, with nearly half of patients falling out of care within 5 years of starting ART. Non-Nucleoside reverse transcriptase pre-treatment drug resistance exceeds 10% in the setting; the threshold required to trigger in a change in first-line ART using the public health approach. These factors are contributory to increasing HIV drug resistance (HIVDR) in this setting. HIVDR is associated with increased morbidity and mortality with the risk of transmitting drug-resistant HIV to sexual partners. The investigators presented these findings to healthcare providers, policy makers and community representatives with brainstorming of health system challenges and potential interventions. This study aims to complement these findings by investigating the clinical and process impediments in VLM within the health system and to develop a quality improvement package (QIP) to address the gaps. The stakeholders recommended such QIP would utilise the viral load (VL) champion model, a named healthcare provider who would be the focal point for ensuring proper administrative management of viral load tests and results through identification of those who need tests and triaging of results for action. This QIP will be supported by technological enhancement of the routine clinic-based TIER.Net software which will allow daily automatic import of results from the National Health Service Laboratory (NHLS) to TIER.Net and development of a dashboard system to support VLM. In addition, results of contact tracing will be recorded and followed up pro-actively if not initially successful. The investigators will evaluate the effectiveness of these interventions compared to standard care for improving VLM and virological suppression using an innovative effectiveness-implementation hybrid cluster-randomised design in 10 clinics. A within-trial health economics analysis will be undertaken using recommended methods to examine the cost-effectiveness of the intervention compared to standard care.
The present study will try to investigate and analyze the psycho-social hindrances and levers concerning the recourse to late HIV testing among the MSM population. This study is divided in two parts. The first one will consist of individual and groups interviews. Then, depending on the items that will rise from the first part of the study, groups interview will take place based on theses items. Finally, a questionnaire build from the collected information will be sent to MSM community in order to obtain quantitative results.
Current HIV treatment guidelines recommend the use of triple-drug therapy (two nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors and either a protease inhibitor, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, or an integrase inhibitor) for the treatment of antiretroviral (ARV)-naïve patients. With the introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), patients with HIV are living much longer. With the increasing lifespan of persons with HIV, long-term complications from therapy as well as the occurrence of co-morbidities with aging have prompted HCPs to re-think the current treatment paradigm and consider novel combinations of ARVs. All of the currently approved HIV antiretrovirals have been implicated in causing long-term toxicities; however the greatest body of evidence for long-term metabolic effects has implicated the nucleoside reverse transcriptase (NRTI) class. By utilizing a non-NRTI treatment regimen, it is hypothesized that many of these long-term metabolic effects (renal toxicity, bone loss, body fat changes) can be delayed or avoided altogether. The clinical data on novel combinations is currently limited but rapidly growing and has included several combinations that have utilized darunavir. This study will be the first of its kind using the unique combination of darunavir/cobicistat and rilpivirine. Currently, this drug combination is not a recommended option for first time treatment of HIV
HBV vaccination is of paramount importance among HIV positive persons due to an increased risk of infection and disease progression. The most widely used ENGERIX B vaccine reaches a lower rate of vaccination (20-70%) among HIV positive vaccinees (compared to over 90% in the normal population). Sci-B-Vac is novel vaccine containing 3 antigens and is therefore more immunogenic (as opposed to one in ENGERIX B). Its use has been associated with higher and more rapid vaccination rates. Therefore, it has a theoretical advantage in HIV positive individuals.