HIV drug data library
HIV Pharmacology Data Repository
Collecting and sharing detailed HIV drug level data to help researchers improve treatment and prevention for people living with HIV.
Quick facts
| Grant type | NIH-funded research |
|---|---|
| Study type | NIH-funded research |
| Funding institution | Univ of North Carolina Chapel Hill NIH-funded |
| Lab location | 1 site (Chapel Hill, United States) |
| Project ID | NIH-11247536 on NIH RePORTER |
What this research studies
As a person living with HIV, this project expands a searchable library of drug concentration measurements gathered from many studies and sample types. The team will add more concentration-vs-time data, make the files machine-readable, and build tools that make it easier for researchers to explore dosing and drug distribution. They will promote use of the repository, work with users to understand needs, and tailor the resource to support drug development and clinical decision-making. The library already contains tens of thousands of datapoints and will be grown and shared under FAIR data principles.
Who could benefit from this research
Good fit: People living with HIV who have participated in antiretroviral drug studies or whose clinical sites hold drug concentration data or samples are the most relevant contributors and future beneficiaries.
Not a fit: People without HIV or those not taking antiretroviral medications are unlikely to see direct benefits from this repository.
Why it matters
Potential benefit: If successful, this resource could speed development and optimization of HIV drugs and dosing so people with HIV get safer and more effective treatments sooner.
How similar studies have performed: This builds on UNC CFAR's long-standing CPAC Core collection of tens of thousands of drug concentration measurements, so it extends an established, successful data-sharing approach.
Where this research is happening
Chapel Hill, United States
- Univ of North Carolina Chapel Hill — Chapel Hill, United States (Active)
Researchers
- Principal investigator: Cottrell, Mackenzie — Univ of North Carolina Chapel Hill
- Study coordinator: Cottrell, Mackenzie
About this research
- This is an active NIH-funded research project — typically early-stage science, not a clinical trial accepting patient enrollment.
- Some NIH-funded labs run parallel clinical studies or seek volunteers for related work. To check, contact the principal investigator or institution listed above.
- For full project details, budget, and progress reports, visit the official NIH RePORTER page below.