View clinical trials related to Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis.
Filter by:This project will develop and implement a multi-component intervention using mobile health technology to improve HIV self-management and reduce substance use. Specifically, the investigators will adapt Healthy Choices (HC) to develop mobile HC (mHC) and develop Motivational text messaging (MTM) for Zambian emerging adults living with HIV.
This is an interventional study investigating HPV carriage and liquid-based cytology at anal level. It will be offered to all patients undergoing PreP consultations at Besançon University Hospital. The anal swab will be taken by the doctor using a cyto-brush during the consultation.
The goal of this trial is to understand which strategies work best to support pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) use among female sex workers (FSW) and adolescent girls and youth women (AGYW) in uMgungundlovu, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive a combination of up to four support strategies encourage the participants in continuing to use PrEP. The four strategies being tested are: case management, food vouchers, peer support buddies, and community-based PrEP pick-up points. The intention of this trial is to determine which PrEP support strategy or bundle(s) of strategies best promote(s) long-term PrEP use, so that these services can be scaled up to other districts in South Africa.
The overall goal of this study is to test whether dyadic and focused case management will (1) improve financial wellbeing, (2) improve access to food, (3) increase linkage and retention rates for individuals living with HIV or those taking PrEP (PrEP persistence), and (4) increase the proportion of individuals living with HIV who are virally suppressed (viral suppression) when compared to routine Ryan White Non-Medical Case Management.
The primary purpose of this study is to assess the safety of long-acting injectable cabotegravir (CAB-LA) and oral pre-expose prophylaxis (PrEP) (FTC/TDF or 3TC/TDF) during pregnancy and breastfeeding among pregnant women and their infants in Malawi. The main question the study aims to answer is: - Do composite adverse pregnancy events, maternal health outcomes, and/or infant health outcomes differ between individuals taking oral PrEP and those taking CAB-LA? Women receiving PrEP at the time of pregnancy diagnosis or initiating PrEP during pregnancy will enroll into a Safety Cohort where they will be closely followed up during pregnancy while optimizing their antenatal care (ANC) per the Malawi ANC package. Women will have access to either CAB-LA or oral PrEP at the start of the study and will be given an opportunity to choose one option. Women and their infants will attend a series of follow-up visits through pregnancy, birth, and the postnatal period. In addition, the study will contribute to the development of a national PrEP Pregnancy Registry which will be initially rolled out in Lilongwe and Blantyre -the two most populous cities in Malawi-before a nationwide roll out begins under the guidance of the Malawi Ministry of Health.
Using a participatory implementation science framework, I will test whether an adapted and community empowered group healthcare model, Centering PrEP+, is a feasible and acceptable health system intervention to improve the health of sex workers and their clients by increasing PrEP uptake and adherence. The conduct of this pilot study will provide an opportunity to gain experience with all aspects of intervention research, including recruitment, retention, implementing a randomization protocol, assessing measurement tools, delivering an intervention, and monitoring fidelity across two sites, tracking all metrics suggested by CONSORT, data collection and management of quantitative data from multiple sources (e.g., survey, laboratory), data analysis, and dissemination.
The study's aim is to implement a home-based PrEP (HB-PrEP) monitoring system (self-collected blood and extragenital specimens at home and telehealth follow-up) into a large, urban sexual health clinic while also evaluating the program's clinical effectiveness. Study participants will self-collect blood specimens using Tasso devices, which are currently designated as FDA Class 2 exempt medical devices (similar to a medical lancet). This study will be integrated into King County's Ending the HIV Epidemic plan and generate data to inform refinement, adaptation and scale-up of future HB-PrEP programs. Specific research aims are to: 1. Conduct a hybrid randomized trial to compare the impact of a HB-PrEP program versus standard of care (routine in-clinic monitoring) on PrEP retention over time and use mixed-methods assessments to define the factors that influence HB-PrEP implementation. Hypothesis: HB-PrEP will increase PrEP retention rates by >10% at 18 months and 60% of those offered HB-PrEP will use it for over half of visits. 2. Perform a cost analysis of the HB-PrEP implementation strategy compared to standard care. Hypothesis: HB-PrEP cost will fall within the HIV prevention budget and be affordable with comparable costs to SOC. 3. Develop a qualitative tool to engage healthcare stakeholders and determine the wider scalability of HB-PrEP.
The Alternative Sexualities Health Research Alliance (TASHRA) will work collaboratively with Gilead Sciences, Inc. to study Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) uptake and adherence; levels of stigma around PrEP use; and changes in health beliefs around PrEP use. The study design will compare kink-involved or bondage/discipline/dominance/submission/sadism/masochism (BDSM)-involved individuals responses to generic vs. kink-focused printed and educational-entertaining video materials in a 12 month crossover study. The primary objective of the study is to examine factors that increase the uptake of PrEP in a novel sexual subculture by testing the impact of an entertainment-education intervention designed to be highly relatable to kink-involved individuals. Secondary Objectives: PrEP4Kink will measure knowledge of PrEP and attitudes towards PrEP uptake over time. These are elements identified by the Health Belief Model: perceived risk of HIV; susceptibility to HIV; perceived barriers to PrEP uptake; perceived benefits of PrEP uptake; perceived effectiveness of PrEP; and self-efficacy of initiating PrEP uptake. Moderating and ancillary factors will be measured, and their relation to the elements of the Health Belief Model will be analyzed. Moderating factors include the centrality of kink identity; the level of kink community involvement; the types and frequencies of kink and sex behaviors. Demographic variables will be measured and their relation to elements of the Health Belief Model will be analyzed, including age; number of years involved in kink; gender identity; sex assigned at birth; racial/ethnic identity; educational attainment; income level; insurance coverage; sexual orientation identity; and sexual attraction.
The goal of these two intervention studies is to test promising health communication messaging strategies most likely to enhance Black, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic White YMSM's (young men who have sex with men's) engagement with online content about injectable and oral PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis). Participants will be asked to browse a mock Google results page featuring various kinds of PrEP information, and their browsing behavior will be unobtrusively logged. In Study 1, participants will be randomly assigned to browse for information about oral PrEP or browse for information about injectable PrEP. The design of Study 2 will be identical to Study 1 but will focus only on injectable PrEP content. In addition to browsing behavior, visual behavior data will also be collected in Study 2 with eye-trackers.
Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) at risk of HIV in sub-Saharan Africa, frequently (20-50%) have symptoms of common mental disorders, including depression, anxiety, and stress. These symptoms are associated with suboptimal adherence to HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), a highly effective HIV prevention approach. In this project, the team seeks to address poor mental health and consequent impacts on PrEP adherence and among AGYW at risk of HIV by testing an evidence-based mental health intervention (the Youth Friendship Bench SA) adapted for PrEP delivery programs.