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RECRUITING
NCT01202305

The Use of Lymph Node Biopsies to Support HIV Pathogenesis Studies

Sponsor: University of California, San Francisco

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

HIV medicines have led to dramatic improvements in health. However, there remains a concern for potential drug toxicities, cost of drugs, and need for life-long treatment. In addition, research has found that health is not completely restored in HIV-infected patients, even if they have been taking effective HIV medicines for a long time. This may be due to direct drug-toxicity, continued replication of the virus, and/or inflammation of the body in response to the virus. Therefore, a more complete understanding of how HIV stays in the body is necessary. Recent research has shown that one of the places that HIV can stay in the body is in lymphatic tissues such as lymph nodes (even in patients who have been taking HIV medicines for a long time). In addition, the amount of damage to the lymphatic tissues can predict how the immune system (CD4+ T cell count) will respond to therapy. The investigators therefore propose a study in which lymph nodes from the groin area will be removed, with the goals of: 1) seeing how much HIV is in lymph nodes and 2) seeing how much damage has happened to the lymph node architecture.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 70 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

50

Start Date

2011-04

Completion Date

2030-04

Last Updated

2025-04-06

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Conditions

Interventions

PROCEDURE

Lymph node biopsy

Inguinal lymph node biopsy

Locations (1)

San Francisco General Hospital

San Francisco, California, United States