Lila A Sheira, Zachary A Kwena, Benard Ayieko, Edwin D Charlebois, Kawango Agot, Sarah A Gutin, Jayne Lewis-Kulzer, Phoebe Olugo, Monica Gandhi, Elizabeth A Bukusi, Harsha Thirumurthy, Daniel Adede, James Moody, Carol S Camlin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: Social networks may play a vital role in shaping health behaviors, including engagement in HIV prevention and treatment. We evaluated the impact of an HIV status-neutral, social-network-based HIV self-testing and linkage intervention on pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) adherence and HIV viral suppression among men working alongside Lake Victoria, Kenya.
Design: Cluster-randomized controlled trial.
Methods: After a census of fishermen, distinct social networks with highly socially-connected men were identified, "promoters" per network were recruited, and networks were randomized to study arms. Promoters distributed HIV self-tests kits to fishermen in their network and encouraged linkage and retention in prevention and care (intervention) or distributed vouchers redeemable for routine HIV testing (control). We report the tertiary outcomes of a) PrEP adherence, measured via a urine tenofovir assay among PrEP users, and b) viral load among PLHIV. We conducted a logistic regression to evaluate the intervention's association with PrEP adherence and viral suppression.
Results: Of 733 baselined, 339 linked to clinics: 62 initiated PrEP, 25 were already on PrEP, and 166 were living with HIV. Urine tenofovir was detected among 12 of 70 participants who gave urine samples (14% control vs. 19% intervention), and 43 of 166 participants on antiretroviral therapy had detectable viral loads (40.2% control vs. 35.7% intervention). There were no significant differences by arm in urine tenofovir levels nor viral suppression.
Conclusions: A social network-based, status-neutral intervention that increased men's testing and linkage was not associated with PrEP adherence nor viral suppression. An adequately-powered study is necessary to evaluate whether social-network-based interventions can improve these outcomes.
期刊介绍:
Publishing the very latest ground breaking research on HIV and AIDS. Read by all the top clinicians and researchers, AIDS has the highest impact of all AIDS-related journals. With 18 issues per year, AIDS guarantees the authoritative presentation of significant advances. The Editors, themselves noted international experts who know the demands of your work, are committed to making AIDS the most distinguished and innovative journal in the field. Submitted articles undergo a preliminary review by the editor. Some articles may be returned to authors without further consideration. Those being considered for publication will undergo further assessment and peer-review by the editors and those invited to do so from a reviewer pool.