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The goal of this clinical study is to evaluate the effectiveness, safety and patient experience of an integrated care pathway combining rapid antiretroviral (ART) initiation with BIC/FTC/TAF and peer navigation for treatment naïve newly-diagnosed or relinking HIV-infected PWIDs, in terms of viral suppression rates, adverse events and patient-reported health outcomes (PROs).
The main objectives of the study are the assessment of:
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Taking into account the increased rates of new cases of HIV infection among people who inject drugs (PWID) in Greece, it is proposed the conduct of the observational study with the aim to assess whether clinical outcomes can be improved by the implementation of rapid ART initiation in newly diagnosed HIV-positive PWIDs and re-linking to care previously diagnosed HIV-positive PWIDs with a suitable medication, such as BIC/FTC/TAF, combined with peer-navigation support that can help the afflicted patients overcome social barriers and challenges. Therefore, this pilot study aims to evaluate the effectiveness, safety and patient experience of an integrated care pathway combining rapid ART initiation with BIC/FTC/TAF and peer navigation for treatment naïve newly-diagnosed or relinking HIV-infected PWIDs, in terms of viral suppression rates, adverse events and patient-reported health outcomes (PROs). Given the armamentarium of potent ART regimens, HIV infection has been transformed from a terminal illness into a chronic condition, thus, evaluating the impact of ARTs from patients' perspective is increasingly used [17]. The results of this study are expected to contribute towards informed health policy practices, accelerating and ameliorating care and providing the basis to curb the HIV epidemic and bringing us closer to its end.
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37 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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