View clinical trials related to Human Immunodeficiency Virus.
Filter by:The proposed study is a phase 1, open label, single arm study to evaluate the safety and antiretroviral activity of the combination of two long-acting broadly neutralizing antibodies, 3BNC117-LS dosed once at 30 mg/kg and 10-1074-LS dosed once at 10 mg/kg, both intravenously (IV) at week 0, plus an IL-15 superagonist complex, N-803, dosed at 6 mcg/kg, subcutaneously (SC) at week 1 and then every 3 weeks for a total of 8 doses, in ART-treated adults living with HIV during analytical treatment interruption.
This study will test brentuximab vedotin to see if it is safe for people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) who have low CD4+ and have received antiretroviral therapy (ART) treatment. It will also see if brentuximab vedotin raises CD4+ counts. It will study the side effects of this drug as well. A side effect is anything a drug does to the body besides treating the disease. In this study participants will be assigned randomly to a group. Participants will get either brentuximab vedotin or placebo. A placebo looks like the drug but does not contain any medicine in it. All participants will keep getting ART during the study.
From a sample of 272 male-female couples (544 individuals, 272 men and 272 women) recruited from rural KaZulu-Natal, South Africa, couples will be randomized to receive either individual a package of dyadic counseling and testing (intervention arm) or an attention matched control. The research examines the impact of a package of dyadic counseling and testing on viral suppression and engagement in HIV care among sero-discordant and concordant positive male-female couples in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
This is a cross-sectional research. The Protection Motivation Theory (PMT) was applied as theoretical framework to analyze correlation of prevention knowledge, prevention intentions and anxiety, and prevention behavior of COVID-19 and HIV risk feature and behavior and stigma of people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA), and HIV high-risk groups. Purposive and snowball sampling will be applied to recruit participant who visit hospital, HIV/AIDS related institutions, and social media platforms. The investigators expect that the outcome could reveal the relationship of cognition and attitude of COVID-19 to HIV prevention and treatment.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the National Institutes of Health (NIH), published Final Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Organ Policy Equity (HOPE) Act Safeguards and Research Criteria for Transplantation of Organs Infected With HIV. All such transplants must occur under an institutional review board (IRB) approved research protocol that is compliant with federal regulations governing human subjects research. This is an investigator-initiated, observational prospective study of solid organ transplantation utilizing HIV-positive donors in HIV positive recipients. Stable HIV-infected adults in need of a solid organ transplant (kidney) who meet standard and study specified HIV criteria for organ transplantation will be offered enrollment in the study. Deceased donors (kidney) and living donors (kidney) will be utilized in this protocol. The goal of this research is to increase knowledge about the safety, efficacy, and effectiveness of solid organ transplantation (SOT) utilizing HIV-positive donors in HIV-positive recipients.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of an islatravir (ISL)-eluting implant. Participants will receive an implant placed in the upper arm for approximately 52 weeks with 8 weeks of follow-up in the Base Study. A subset of participants will also receive a second implant for an additional 12 weeks before 8 weeks of follow-up in the Substudy.
Background Active Hexose Correlated Compound is assumed to have a positive effect on immunity, including induce a phagocytic response, reduce tumor resistance, and cytokine response including interferon-gamma and interleukins. Tuberculosis patients with concurrent Human immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) might have benefit when receiving active hexose compound during tuberculosis treatment Purposes 1. To assess the clinical changes of patients who receive active hexose compound as an adjuvant to tuberculosis therapy in patients with HIV 2. To assess the difference of pro-inflammatory cytokines between standard therapy and active hexose compound adjuvant Methods A clinical trial involving patients with Tuberculosis-HIV infection Hypothesis 1. Clinical improvement is significantly different where the group who receive active compound will have the better clinical outcome 2. Lower proinflammatory cytokines are observed in people who receive active compound
The primary purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of interferon-gamma by subcutaneous injection in complex treatment of patients with co-infection of HIV and pulmonary tuberculosis and to determine the rational of its use.
This study aims to evaluate the efficacy of cefixime compared to benzathine penicillin G in the treatment of syphilis.
This is a clinical trial for TPLWH (Trans People Living with HIV) who are stable on cART with an undetectable viral load or a detectable viral load but no resistance to NRTIs and InSTI. Following written consent and screening procedures, study subjects will undergo a switch (or will restart) of their combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) to Biktarvy. The goal of this research project is to recruit an understudied population into a controlled clinical trial aimed at optimizing TPLWH cART. This will be demonstrated by measuring viral load outcomes at regular intervals, with a focus on viral load results 48 weeks after Biktarvy initiation (primary outcome).