Loading clinical trials...
Loading clinical trials...
Browse 1,802 clinical trials for hiv/aids. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
Find trials near:
Showing 401-420 of 1,802 trials
NCT06511180
The WHO has recommended TB preventive therapy (TPT) for children living with HIV (CLHIV) and household contacts of people living with TB, however, the scale-up and implementation of TPT has been sub-optimal globally particularly in children. A safe and effective short-course TPT regimen, 3HP (rifapentine and isoniazid given once weekly for three months), is available but there is a lack of child-friendly formulations resulting in increased pill burden and there is a need to improve acceptability and adherence among children. The introduction of a dispersible rifapentine formulation has potential to improve uptake, treatment adherence and completion. Overall goal is to generate critical knowledge to improve delivery of TPT and, more specifically, of dispersible 3HP, in children in routine programs. This evaluation will create an important understanding of TPT uptake and completion among children and assess the impact of the introduction of a dispersible 3HP formulation. These results will provide actionable information for improving service delivery and the scale-up of TPT in the respective countries.
NCT03729778
The purpose of this study is to learn more about both HIV-1 infection and advancing age, and their association with increased risk of serious infection and impaired response to the Prevnar 13 vaccine.
NCT03397576
Adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) drops sharply after prison release. Effective medication adherence training immediately before and after prison release may improve health outcomes and limit transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). ATHENA (Adherence Through Home Education and Nursing Assessment) is an evidence-based medication adherence intervention, which is delivered in the patient's home by nurses and peer educators working in teams. In this study, researchers will examine the acceptability and feasibility of the ATHENA intervention through a 2-arm randomized controlled trial conducted with HIV-infected prisoners in Indonesia. Eligible subjects will be \>18 years of age, HIV-infected, and may be treatment-experienced or treatment-naive. Subjects randomized to the intervention arm will participate in monthly medication adherence counseling sessions within prison and home visits up to four months after prison release. Subjects randomized to the control arm will receive standard care, which includes a referral for HIV care after prison release. The primary endpoint is the proportion of subjects demonstrating ART adherence \>90% at 3 months after prison release. Secondary endpoints are: 1) retention in HIV care, 2) ART initiation, 3) HIV- RNA viral load, 4) CD4+ T-cell count, 5) quality of life, 6) hospitalization, 6) substance use and sexual risk behaviors at 3 months after prison release.