Trials
Candidate strategies that meet certain criteria
in laboratory and animal studies move into
clinical trials in humans. Clinical trials
enroll human volunteers to evaluate scientific
or medical interventions like drugs, vaccines
and other treatments.
These trials are necessary to understand whether an intervention, like a vaccine or pill, is a viable prevention strategy in people.
This section provides information on the following:
The intervention-specific trials sections (see left) include trials tables, trial result details and trial-specific pages that include in-depth coverage of specific trials or products.
These trials are necessary to understand whether an intervention, like a vaccine or pill, is a viable prevention strategy in people.
This section provides information on the following:
- the clinical trials
process (how experimental candidates are
tested in people),
- links to
information on the full research process (from basic
science to implementation)
- and information on ongoing and completed biomedical HIV prevention clinical trials.
The intervention-specific trials sections (see left) include trials tables, trial result details and trial-specific pages that include in-depth coverage of specific trials or products.




