Adaptive HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis adherence interventions for young women in Johannesburg, South Africa: a sequential multiple-assignment randomised trial.

IF 12.8 1区 医学 Q1 IMMUNOLOGY Lancet Hiv Pub Date : 2024-12-13 DOI:10.1016/S2352-3018(24)00268-6
Jennifer Velloza, Nicole Poovan, Allison Meisner, Nontokozo Ndlovu, Nomhle Ndimande-Khoza, Cole Grabow, Phumzile Zwane, Samukelo Mbele, Mapaseka Molefe, Deborah Donnell, Jared M Baeten, Sybil Hosek, Connie Celum, Sinead Delany-Moretlwe
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Abstract

Background: Adherence to daily oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is low among African young women, and layered support strategies are needed to improve PrEP adherence in this population. We aimed to evaluate potentially scalable adherence-support strategies for young women aged 18-25 years who initiated PrEP in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Methods: We conducted a sequential multiple-assignment randomised trial at Ward 21 of the Wits Reproductive Health and HIV Institute clinical research site, affiliated with University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa. Participants were eligible if they were assigned female sex at birth, aged 18-25 years, not living with HIV, sexually active, newly initiating PrEP, had regular access to a mobile telephone, and could read. Using sequentially numbered, sealed, opaque envelopes containing group allocation, a staff member assigned enrolled participants (1:1) to receive one of two adherence-support interventions: once per week two-way SMS communication or participation in a WhatsApp peer-support group. Participants assigned to WhatsApp were put into groups with approximately 25 participants, during which they were prompted by staff facilitators to discuss any challenges with PrEP use or other events happening in their lives. The allocation sequence was generated by the data manager using random numbers with variable block sizes between 10 and 14. Only trial investigators were masked to participant intervention assignments; participants, people giving interventions, people assessing outcomes, and people analysing data were not masked to group assignment. All enrolled participants were offered PrEP (ie, co-formulated, once per day oral emtricitabine 200 mg and tenofovir disoproxil fumarate 300 mg). The primary outcome was high PrEP adherence at month 9, defined as concentration of tenofovir diphosphate on dried blood sample of 700 fmol per punch or more. At month 3, participants with low PrEP adherence were randomly assigned to a secondary, intensified intervention of issue-focused counselling once per month or drug-level feedback counselling based on PrEP drug concentrations at months 3 and 6. The protocol was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04038060) and the trial is complete.

Findings: Participants were enrolled and followed up between May 16, 2019, and Jan 25, 2022. From May 16, 2019, to Jan 29, 2021, 401 participants were screened and 360 were enrolled and initiated PrEP. 180 (50%) were randomly assigned to two-way SMS and 180 (50%) were randomly assigned to WhatsApp support groups. At month 9, 34 (20%) of 174 participants in the two-way SMS arm had tenofovir diphosphate 700 fmol per punch or more, compared with 32 (18%) of 174 in the WhatsApp arm (relative risk 1·06, 95% CI 0·69-1·64; p=0·78). At month 9, four (5%) of 76 participants in the drug-level feedback arm had tenofovir diphosphate 700 fmol per punch or more, compared with three (4%) of 76 participants in the monthly counselling arm (1·33, 0·31-5·76; p=0·70). 22 serious adverse events were reported during the trial, but were all deemed unrelated to the trial.

Interpretation: PrEP adherence did not differ across interventions among young women in Johannesburg, South Africa. Future research is needed on whether and how to scale-up PrEP support for young women in resource-constrained settings.

Funding: US National Institutes of Health.

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针对南非约翰内斯堡年轻女性的适应性艾滋病暴露前预防干预措施:顺序多分配随机试验。
背景:非洲年轻女性对每日口服暴露前预防药物(PrEP)的依从性较低,因此需要采取分层支持策略来提高该人群对 PrEP 的依从性。我们旨在评估针对南非约翰内斯堡 18-25 岁开始接受 PrEP 的年轻女性可能采取的可扩展的依从性支持策略:我们在南非约翰内斯堡威特沃特斯兰德大学下属的威特斯生殖健康与艾滋病研究所临床研究基地 21 号病房进行了一项连续多次分配随机试验。只要出生时性别为女性、年龄在 18-25 岁之间、未感染 HIV、性生活活跃、刚开始使用 PrEP、经常使用移动电话且识字,就有资格参加试验。工作人员使用按顺序编号、密封的不透明信封(内含小组分配表),将登记的参与者(1:1)分配到两种依从性支持干预措施中的一种:每周一次的双向短信通信或参加 WhatsApp 同伴支持小组。被分配到 WhatsApp 群组的参与者被编入约 25 人的小组,在此期间,工作人员会提示他们讨论使用 PrEP 所面临的任何挑战或生活中发生的其他事件。分配顺序由数据管理员使用随机数生成,组块大小在 10 到 14 之间。只有试验调查人员对参与者的干预分配进行了蒙蔽;参与者、提供干预的人员、评估结果的人员和分析数据的人员均不对分组分配进行蒙蔽。所有参与试验的人员都接受了 PrEP(即共同配制、每天口服一次的恩曲他滨 200 毫克和富马酸替诺福韦二吡呋酯 300 毫克)。主要研究结果是第 9 个月时 PrEP 的高度依从性,即干血样本中的二磷酸替诺福韦浓度达到或超过 700 fmol/punch。在第 3 个月,PrEP 依从性低的参与者被随机分配到次要的强化干预中,即每月一次以问题为重点的咨询或根据第 3 个月和第 6 个月的 PrEP 药物浓度提供药物级别的反馈咨询。该方案已在ClinicalTrials.gov(NCT04038060)上注册,目前试验已经完成:参与者于 2019 年 5 月 16 日至 2022 年 1 月 25 日期间注册并接受随访。从 2019 年 5 月 16 日到 2021 年 1 月 29 日,401 名参与者接受了筛查,360 名参与者注册并开始使用 PrEP。180人(50%)被随机分配到双向短信群组,180人(50%)被随机分配到WhatsApp支持群组。第9个月时,双向短信组的174名参与者中有34人(20%)的二磷酸替诺福韦达到或超过700 fmol/punch,而WhatsApp组的174名参与者中有32人(18%)达到或超过700 fmol/punch(相对风险1-06,95% CI 0-69-1-64;P=0-78)。第9个月时,药物水平反馈组的76名参与者中有4人(5%)的二磷酸替诺福韦达到或超过700 fmol/punch,而每月咨询组的76名参与者中有3人(4%)达到或超过700 fmol/punch(1-33,0-31-5-76;P=0-70)。试验期间共报告了22起严重不良事件,但均被认为与试验无关:在南非约翰内斯堡的年轻女性中,PrEP 在不同干预措施下的依从性并无差异。未来需要研究是否以及如何在资源有限的环境中扩大对年轻女性的 PrEP 支持:美国国立卫生研究院。
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来源期刊
Lancet Hiv
Lancet Hiv IMMUNOLOGYINFECTIOUS DISEASES&-INFECTIOUS DISEASES
CiteScore
19.90
自引率
4.30%
发文量
368
期刊介绍: The Lancet HIV is an internationally trusted source of clinical, public health, and global health knowledge with an Impact Factor of 16.1. It is dedicated to publishing original research, evidence-based reviews, and insightful features that advocate for change in or illuminates HIV clinical practice. The journal aims to provide a holistic view of the pandemic, covering clinical, epidemiological, and operational disciplines. It publishes content on innovative treatments and the biological research behind them, novel methods of service delivery, and new approaches to confronting HIV/AIDS worldwide. The Lancet HIV publishes various types of content including articles, reviews, comments, correspondences, and viewpoints. It also publishes series that aim to shape and drive positive change in clinical practice and health policy in areas of need in HIV. The journal is indexed by several abstracting and indexing services, including Crossref, Embase, Essential Science Indicators, MEDLINE, PubMed, SCIE and Scopus.
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