Treatment Trials

32 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions

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COMPLETED
Improving Antiretroviral Medication Adherence Among HIV-infected Youth
Description

HIV is increasing among adolescents and young adults in the US. Antiretroviral medications, when taken correctly (≥ 90% of prescribed doses taken), can vastly improve life expectancy. However, adherence among HIV-infected young people is suboptimal, and few interventions are available to help adolescents adhere to treatment. The study is a randomized controlled trial (RCT) pilot trial of Positive STEPS (the adapted form of the Life-Steps behavioral intervention) to improve medication adherence among HIV-infected youth. The study will allow us to demonstrate participant acceptance, ability to recruit, feasibility of intervention delivery with study counselors and all study procedures, and initial clinically significant improvement in medication adherence via MEMS caps. This research will lay the groundwork for a federal grant application for a multi-site randomized controlled intervention trial.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Improving Antiretroviral Medication Adherence Among HIV-infected Youth: Phase I
Description

HIV is increasing among adolescents and young adults in the US. Antiretroviral medications, when taken correctly (≥90% of prescribed doses taken), can vastly improve life expectancy. However, adherence among HIV-infected young people is suboptimal, and few interventions are available to help adolescents adhere to treatment. The first phase of the study is an intervention development phase, which includes conducting interviews with 40 HIV-infected youth for input on the adaptation of the approach. The information obtained from the qualitative interviews is used to adapt the Life-Steps intervention (designed by our group for HIV-infected adults) to be responsive to the needs of HIV-infected adolescents, with acceptability of topics and content, and feasibility of intervention delivery to be tested in an open pilot trial.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Patient Portal to Support Treatment Adherence
Description

The purpose of this study is to conduct a randomized control trial of a behavioral intervention delivered by nurses via an electronic medical record (EMR) patient web portal to determine if this is an efficacious method for supporting medication adherence.

UNKNOWN
Randomized Controlled Trial Using Patient Reported Outcomes and Care Managers to Improve HIV Medication Adherence in Routine Clinical Care
Description

Among HIV-infected patients, adherence to antiretroviral medications is one of the most important determinants of clinical outcomes including viral suppression, viral resistance, disease progression, and death. Unfortunately poor adherence among patients with HIV is very common, mean levels of adherence in clinical cohorts are 60-75% or less. Alcohol, drug abuse, and mental illness particularly depression symptoms are key predictors of poor adherence, common among HIV-infected individuals, and important to identify and treat among nonadherent patients. This study will examine the ability of patient reported outcomes (PROs) and a targeted care management approach to improve clinical outcomes with a randomized controlled trial (RCT) in routine clinical care of patients with HIV. The investigators will determine whether healthcare delivery team notification of PROs including antiretroviral medication adherence and barriers of adherence such as depression and substance abuse along with tailored intervention recommendations and targeted care management leads to improvement in both process and clinical outcomes including patient-reported outcomes. The investigators will examine process outcomes such as use of clinic support services, and patient outcomes such as improvement in adherence, substance use, depression, and HIV-1 RNA levels.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Improving Treatment Adherence in HIV-Infected Individuals
Description

This study will develop and evaluate the efficacy of an individualized, interactive, computer software program delivered in conjunction with clinical care in increasing and supporting antiretroviral therapy adherence in HIV-infected individuals.

COMPLETED
Development of a Urine-Based Point-of-Care Test for Adherence to Antiretroviral Drugs
Description

This is a single-center, open label study to identify adherence levels of commonly prescribed FDA-approved antiretroviral agents by tracking the decline of drug concentrations in plasma, urine and saliva following abrupt drug cessation in HIV-negative adults. Results from this study may provide support for development of a point of care urine testing device to monitor drug adherence.

COMPLETED
Quantifying Drug Adherence and Drug Exposure to Antiretroviral Therapy
Description

The purpose of this study is to evaluate cumulative exposure to tenofovir diphosphate (TFV-DP) using dried blood spots (DBS) in treated HIV-infected patients who are receiving a TFV-based regimen. Using DBS will allow the investigators to assess this simple method to measure drug exposure in the clinical setting. The investigators hypothesize that TFV-DP levels will be lowest in individuals with a detectable viral load and highest in those with viral suppression.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Next Generation Ingestible Sensors for Medication Adherence Measurement
Description

This study will investigate the use of a next-generation Reader as part of a digital pill system (DPS; ID-Cap System) to measure adherence to both antiretroviral therapy (ART) and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in people living with HIV (PLWH) and HIV-negative individuals, respectively. During the first (non-human subjects) component of this study, we developed a wrist-borne Reader according to design specifications and preferences shared by DPS users from our previous studies. Early bench testing by etectRx (manufacturer of the ID-Cap System) demonstrated that the wrist-borne version of the Reader acquires signal from the digital pill. This study will therefore evaluate the usability of and user response to a wrist-borne Reader component of the DPS among PLWH on ART and HIV-negative individuals on PrEP.

COMPLETED
Establishing Novel Antiretroviral Imaging for Hair to Elucidate Non-Adherence (ENLIGHTEN)
Description

This is a pilot study to assess the feasibility, acceptability and appropriateness of delivery of the investigational "MedViewer" intervention in adult patients living with HIV who have been prescribed antiretroviral (ARV) medications. The Medviewer uses Infra-red (IR) matrix-assisted laser desorption electrospray ionization (MALDESI) technology for mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) to analyze patient hair samples to provide information on ARV adherence in real-time. The study has two different groups of participants: the patients, and their clinician providers.

COMPLETED
Improving Drug Adherence Among Adolescents in Uganda Using SMS Reminders
Description

In this project the investigators develop and test a short message service (SMS) intervention based on the Information Motivation and Behavior skills (IMB) model. Reminding Adolescents To Adhere (RATA) prompts youths at two clinics in Uganda to take their medications and offers social support via weekly text messages. The investigators propose to adapt their previous successful SMS-intervention to the specific needs of youths and to evaluate the relative effectiveness of one-way versus two-way text messages (where two-way messages allow youths to respond to messages and we hypothesize that this may increase perceived social support that may be important for youth populations). We will also test the effectiveness of SMS messages over the longer-term (2 years), for which currently no information is available.

COMPLETED
Physician Focused Intervention to Improve Adherence With HIV Antiretrovirals
Description

We hypothesized that providing physicians treating with HIV disease, at the time of a routine outpatient visit, with a detailed report describing patients' adherence with HIV antiretroviral medications, would improve the quality of the physician-patient interaction, and also patients' subsequent adherence.

COMPLETED
China Adherence Through Technology Study
Description

The CATS project is designed to increase understanding of interventions that are feasible and effective in helping injection drug users (IDU) or other patients at high risk of poor medication adherence who are HIV-positive to maintain a high ART adherence. The study will involve: assessing the feasibility and acceptability of using real-time feedback, a wireless technology-updated adaptation of an approach the investigators found to be feasible and effective in China, to promote ART adherence among Chinese patients, including IDU; generating preliminary effectiveness data of real-time feedback on adherence, CD4 count, and HIV viral load; and identifying the factors that explain how real-time feedback influences intervention success or failure. The specific aims of the study are: SA1: Determine the feasibility and acceptability of using real-time feedback, a wireless technology-updated adaptation of an approach we found to be feasible and effective in China, to promote ART adherence among Chinese patients. The investigators will conduct a pilot RCT of the real-time feedback intervention among Chinese patients in order to assess its feasibility and acceptability in this population. SA2: Generate preliminary effectiveness data of real-time feedback on adherence, CD4 count, and HIV viral load. The RCT will allow the researchers to generate rigorous estimates of effect sizes on these important endpoints. SA3: Describe the factors that explain how real-time feedback influences intervention success or failure. The investigators will use a quantitative-qualitative mixed-methods research approach to explore how the intervention influences the experience of adherence support in this patient population.

COMPLETED
Improving Food Security and Nutrition to Promote ART Adherence in Latin America
Description

The purpose of this three-year study is to develop, implement, and pilot test a culturally appropriate, multi-component nutrition intervention for people living with HIV and food insecurity in Honduras, which is among the Latin America nations with the highest HIV prevalence rates. The investigators specific aims are to: 1. Explore the relationships between food security, nutrition, and HIV treatment access, utilization, and adherence, and examine key mediators and moderators of these relationships. 2. Develop a multi-component nutrition intervention to address food insecurity among Honduran HIV+ individuals and their families. 3. Evaluate the preliminary effectiveness of the intervention on (1) food security and nutritional status; (2) HIV care retention (clinic attendance), uptake of ART when recommended, and ART adherence; and (3) clinical outcomes (CD4 count, ART side effects, and opportunistic infections). 4. Examine key mediators and moderators of the intervention effects from among characteristics of the patient, household, and contextual setting.

COMPLETED
Secondary HIV Prevention and Adherence Among HIV-infected Drug Users
Description

This study will test whether 3H+ (Holistic Health for HIV) is comparable to the original HHRP+ (Holistic Health Recovery Program) in reducing HIV risk behaviors and improving ART (Antiretroviral Therapy) adherence in a randomized controlled comparative effectiveness trial among 256 HIV+ persons in drug treatment who report unsafe injection drug use practices or sexual risk behavior.

COMPLETED
Medications for Chronic HIV: Education and Collaboration
Description

This study will examine whether a computerized, self-administered assessment of patient medication adherence and health behaviors, plus support for adherence, improves the ability of clinicians to identify adherence problems and leads to better adherence.

RECRUITING
mHealth + e-Navigator Stepped Care on ART Adherence in Latino MSM
Description

The goal of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of stepped care strategies to improve ART adherence among adult Latino MSM with HIV using a sequential, multiple assignment, randomized trial (SMART). The trial will compare a stepped care strategy of delivering TXTXT ("Treatment Text") first and stepping up to remote patient navigation for non-responders vs. a stepped care strategy of delivering TXTXT + e-Navigation first and stepping up to EMA-supported e-Navigation for non-responders. Both TXTXT and the foundations of the e-Navigation interventions are CDC evidence-based interventions (EBI). We propose to use a SMART design which explicitly allows building, testing, and optimizing stepped care strategies without compromising rigor or randomization. We propose three specific aims: Aim 1. Compare the immediate (6-month) and sustained (9- and 12-month) efficacy of two static (non-stepped) treatment regimens (TXTXT alone vs. TXTXT + e-Navigation) on ART adherence and viral suppression among Latino MSM with HIV. Hypothesis 1a. TXTXT + e-Navigation will be more efficacious than TXTXT alone. Aim 2. Compare the immediate (6-month) and sustained (9- and 12-month) efficacy of two stepped care strategies (TXTXT with added e-Navigation for non-responders vs. TXTXT + e-Navigation with added EMA support for non-responders) on ART adherence and viral suppression among Latino MSM with HIV. Hypothesis 2a: TXTXT + e-Navigation with added EMA support for non-responders at the 3-month follow-up will be more efficacious than TXTXT with added e-Navigation for non-responders at the 3-month follow-up. Aim 3. Identify baseline and time-varying moderators on the association between stepped care strategy and ART adherence and viral suppression among Latino MSM with HIV. Hypotheses 3a-c: TXTXT with added e-Navigation for non-responders will be less efficacious than TXTXT + e-Navigation with added EMA support for non-responders for individuals who are: (a) older at baseline, or report (b) substance use, or (c) symptoms of depression between baseline and the 3-month follow-up.

Conditions
COMPLETED
A Technology-Delivered Peer-to-Peer Support ART Adherence Intervention for Substance-using HIV+ Adults
Description

The "Thrive With Me" (TWM) trial is testing the efficacy of a mobile enhanced website aimed at improving Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) adherence for HIV-positive men who have sex with men (MSM). TWM is a technology-delivered peer-to-peer social support intervention with social networking and gaming components. In addition to real-time peer-to-peer support capabilities, the TWM intervention provides participants with Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) adherence self-monitoring tools, medication dose reminders, and HIV-related informational content.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Motivating HIV+ Women: Risk Reduction and ART Adherence
Description

The purpose of this study is to determine if a group motivational interviewing based intervention will increase adherence to antiretroviral medications and use of risk reduction behaviors.

Conditions
RECRUITING
Testing a Real-time Electronic Antiretroviral Adherence Monitoring Intervention
Description

The investigators propose using an electronic adherence device that is basically a pill container that can alert when it is not opened at a scheduled time. The investigators will use this device to alert the medication user at the time when medication is supposed to be taken if the device did not get opened and a pre-identified social support person or case manager when 2 or 7 consecutive days of nonadherence are detected, respectively. The investigators call our approach "A-Team" (Antiretroviral Therapy Electronic Adherence Monitoring). The aims of this application are to determine the acceptability and feasibility of real-time adherence monitoring in support persons and case managers of African American Men who have sex with Men and to test this approach for these men in a 6-month randomized controlled trial among 54 of these men living with HIV and measure ART adherence and viral suppression (the primary outcome).

COMPLETED
Use of Antiretroviral (ARV) Drug Levels in Dried Blood Spots (DBS) to Assess and Manage ART Adherence in South Africa
Description

This is a prospective, pilot study of HIV-positive individuals who have been on tenofovir-containing antiretroviral therapy for at least 4 months. The overall goal of this research is to determine the feasibility of giving patients and their providers monthly feedback about Tenofovir-Diphosphate (TFV-DP) drug levels and to examine patient and provider behaviors in response to receiving this information. This study will build upon the Aim 1 observational study and the subsequent patient and providerFeedback Development Workgroups (FDWs).

COMPLETED
Supporting Health Behavior Among Persons Living With HIV Using Tech, MOST, and Behavioral Economics
Description

The present study focuses on adult persons living with HIV in the New York City and Newark, New Jersey metropolitan areas who are not highly adherent to HIV medication and who do not evidence undetectable HIV viral load (the ultimate goal of HIV treatment). Those who have not decided whether they wish to take HIV medications are invited to enroll. The study uses technology, is grounded in principles of behavioral economics, and uses the multiphase optimization strategy (MOST) to examine the acceptability, feasibility, and evidence of efficacy of three intervention components. The components are intended to increase rates of HIV viral suppression in the sample. The three components are: prizes for viral suppression (fixed compensation \[$275\] or lottery prizes \[up to $500\]), text messages and quiz questions that generate points to earn prizes (to foster engagement), and counseling sessions grounded in the motivational interviewing approach to help participants articulate goals with respect to health and viral suppression, identify and resolve barriers to HIV medication use, and build motivation for viral suppression. Participants are assessed at baseline and then 5- and 8-months later.

COMPLETED
Quantification of Tenofovir Alafenamide Adherence (QUANTI-TAF)
Description

This study is being done to evaluate the relationship between adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) and HIV drug concentrations in persons living with HIV (PLWH) that are taking tenofovir alafenamide (TAF). Adherence will be measured with an ingestible biosensor (digital pill). Antiretroviral drug concentrations will be measured in different types of blood cells.

COMPLETED
Reducing Heavy Drinking to Optimize HIV/AIDS Treatment and Prevention
Description

This is a double-blind placebo-controlled study to evaluate the effect of Naltrexone (NTX) and counseling on highly active antiretroviral treatment (HAART) medication adherence in a cohort of HIV-infected patients who report heavy drinking, or meet criteria for alcohol abuse and/or dependence, and inadequate (\< 95%) HAART adherence. All patients will receive a behavioral intervention, termed Medical Management/Medication Coaching or MM/MC. MM/MC incorporates the behavioral platform Medical Management (MM) from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)-funded COMBINE Study to reduce heavy alcohol use with Medication Coaching (MC), a manualized treatment designed to improve HAART medication adherence in HIV-infected patients with substance use disorders.

COMPLETED
Pediatric Impact: Promoting Adherence to Medications Among HIV-infected Children
Description

The purpose of the study is to develop and evaluate an intervention to promote adherence to HIV medications among children 5-12 years of age. It compares changes in antiretroviral (ARV) adherence between the EIG (enhanced intervention group) and an MIG (minimal intervention group) from baseline to 4 months post-intervention. Secondary outcomes include examining whether improvement in adherence to a medication regimen is associated with improved health outcomes (i.e., viral load, CD4 counts, etc.); identifying and evaluating predictors and/or mediators of adherence; studying the feasibility of electronic recording in measuring adherence in an HIV-infected pediatric population; and evaluating the relationship between the amount of intervention received (i.e., number of hours/number of sessions) and changes in adherence.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Directly Observed Antiretroviral Therapy Among Active Drug Users
Description

The goal of this randomized, controlled trial is to compare the effectiveness of a community-based program of providing supervised antiretroviral therapy to HIV-positive drug users, compared to having the patients take the medicines on their own.

WITHDRAWN
A Trial of Observed Long-acting, Anti-HIV Treatment With a Monoclonal CCR5 Antibody (PRO 140) as an Adjunct to a New, Optimized, Oral Antiretroviral Regimen in HIV-infected Injection Drug Users With Viral Rebound and Documented Poor Adherence
Description

PRO 140 2102 is a phase 2b, national, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study in order to evaluate the safety and efficacy of PRO 140 (anti-CCR5 monoclonal antibody) administered subcutaneously as an adjunct to a new, optimized, oral antiretroviral regimen in HIV-infected injection drug users with viral rebound and documented poor adherence to the previous antiretroviral regimen.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Antidepressant Medication Plus Directly Observed Therapy for Improving Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy
Description

This study will evaluate the effectiveness of directly observed therapy plus antidepressant medication in improving adherence to antiretroviral drug therapy among HIV-infected homeless and marginally housed people with depression.

COMPLETED
Automated Medication Platform with Video Observation and Facial Recognition to Improve Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy in Patients with HIV/AIDS
Description

This is a 90-day medication adherence study testing the HiDO is an automated AI-driven direct observation medication adherence platform, which is a 510K-exempt, Class I medical device with 24 people with HIV/AIDS, ages 18 to 55, who are currently taking ART and reporting less than 100% adherence. The aims of the study are to see whether the device can achieve \>95% ART adherence among all participants averaged over 90 days and to perform usability testing using the System Usability Scale and Net Promoter scores.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Personalized Text Messages to Improve Antiretroviral Treatment (ART) Adherence in HIV+ Methamphetamine Users
Description

Methamphetamine (METH) is a debilitating and frequently abused substance that is often comorbid with HIV infection. HIV+ persons with current METH abuse or dependence (HIV+/METH+) have several characteristics, in addition to their substance use, that make them particularly susceptible to nonadherence to antiretroviral treatment (ART) including elevated rates of neurocognitive impairment, co-occurrence of psychiatric disorders, and unstable living situations. The investigators propose an intervention development study designed to address these potential mechanisms of nonadherence with the following Specific Aims: 1) To further develop and refine a personalized, automated, real-time, mobile phone, text messaging intervention (iTAB) designed to improve adherence to ART medications among HIV+/METH+ persons; 2) To evaluate the acceptability and effectiveness of a brief psychoeducation plus text messaging intervention (iTAB) as compared to psychoeducation alone (CTRL) for the improvement of objectively measured medication adherence among HIV+/METH+ persons; and 3) To examine predictors of within-person trajectories of nonadherence using the longitudinal data collected over the study. In order to realize these aims, the investigators will leverage the infrastructure of two unique UCSD resources increasing likelihood of study success, impact, and innovation: 1) the Translational Methamphetamine AIDS Research Center (TMARC), which is a NIDA-funded center that focuses on the combined effects of METH and HIV infection, and 2) the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2), which conducts research on state-of-the-art wireless means of health promotion. Initially, the investigators will refine the iTAB intervention to ensure that it is user-centered and tailored to the needs of HIV+/METH+ persons via focus groups and rapid prototyping. Once refined, the proposed iTAB intervention will use text messages that are automated, scalable, personalized, interactive, flexible, and motivating. The investigators will assess the acceptability and effectiveness of iTAB in improving objectively measured adherence (i.e., MEMS caps) over a 6-week period via a pilot RCT with 40 HIV+/METH+ assigned to the iTAB intervention and 20 HIV+/METH+ assigned to a psychoeducational control. Predictors of nonadherence including frequency of METH use, neuropsychological impairment, and mood will be examined to determine whether iTAB is better able to compensate for these factors associated with nonadherence as compared to CTRL. Further refinement to the iTAB intervention will be made in order to pursue a large-scale R01 using our tailored intervention.

Conditions
TERMINATED
Evaluation of an Intervention on Adherence to Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART) in HIV Infected Adults
Description

It is known successful HIV therapy depends on the patients' ability to take their medicine regularly. This study is designed to find out if an intervention designed to help patients remember to take their medication is effective. The intervention consists of a wristwatch that has an alarm to remind patients when to take their medication, a pillbox and three monthly phone calls by a physician. All these experimental measures are meant to improve the ability of patients to take their medicines.

Conditions