HIV/AIDS Clinical Trial
Official title:
Outcomes of Differentiated Models of Antiretroviral Treatment (ART) Provision: Multi-Month Dispensing (MMD) of ART in Community ART Distribution for Stable HIV Infected Patients
The aim of this study is to evalulate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of three
models of ART provision for stable ART patients. The objectives are to measure patient
retention, virological suppression, provider and patient costs, cost-effectiveness, and
patient acceptability amongst stable patients who receive ART at intervals of three and six
months within community distribution models, and to compare these to patients who receive ART
directly from the clinic at three month intervals.
Methods
A prospective, parallel, cluster-randomized non-inferiority trial with three study arms will
be conducted. 30 Clusters (sites) will be randomized in strata according to geographic
location (urban and rural) to the 3 study arms as follows:
- Control arm: sites at which patients will receive three monthly ART supply at the
facility (arm 3MF).
- Intervention arm 1: sites at which patients will receive three monthly ART supply in
CAGs (arm 3MC)
- Intervention arm 2: sites at which patients will receive six monthly ART supply in the
community by a healthcare worker (arm 6MCD).
The study population will consist of stable, HIV-infected adults who have received first-line
ART for at least six months, who have a viral load <1000 copies/ml at baseline, and who
provide informed consent for inclusion in the study. An average of 192 participants from each
study site will be included, with a total sample size of approximately 5760 participants.
The primary outcome is retention in care defined as the proportion of patients remaining in
care 12 months after study enrolment, with the hypothesis that patient retention within the
intervention arms will be non-inferior compared to the control arm. Retention in care will
also be compared between the three arms after 24 months.
The secondary outcomes are:
- Viral suppression: defined as the proportion of patients with virological suppression
(<1000 copies/ml) 12 and 24 months after study enrolment;
- Cost of providing ART: defined as the cost per patient of providing ART in each of the
three arms (from a provider perspective);
- Cost of retaining a patient: defined as the provider cost per patient retained and
provider cost per patient retained with virological suppression in each of the three
arms, and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for the comparative arms.
Background In 2015, sub-Saharan Africa was still the region most affected by the HIV
epidemic, with 25.6 (23.1-28.5) million people living with HIV in 2015. It is estimated that
42% of all people living with HIV (PLHIV) in Lesotho were receiving ART by 2015.The United
States Government's President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) has adopted the goals
of 90-90-90 from UNAIDS, and is supporting a swift implementation of the new World Health
Organization'sTest and Start guidelines.With these goals, PEPFAR also sets out to reduce new
infections by 75% and to attain zero discrimination and stigma for all PLHIV.
To assist countries to reach the goal of universal coverage, EQUIP Innovation for health (a
new field support award from the USAID Office of HIV and AIDS that supports innovations in
HIV clinical and community-based HIV treatment related services) is evaluating communitybased
care, treatment and support models to create an enabling environment for massive scale-up of
ART delivery and adherence support. Based on this background, EQUIP and and Elizabeth Glaser
Pediatric AIDS Foundation (EGPAF) propose to conduct operational research that seeks to
understand and measure the effectiveness of implementing a package of services that include
multi-month dispensing (MMD) of ART drugs, Community ART distribution models through
Community ART Groups (CAGs) and Community Distribution points and routine viral load
monitoring of stable patients in communities of PEPFAR/USAID Lesotho scale-up districts.
The aim of this study is to evalulate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of three
models of ART provision for stable ART patients. The objectives are to measure patient
retention, virological suppression, provider and patient costs, cost-effectiveness, and
patient acceptability amongst stable patients who receive ART at intervals of three and six
months within community distribution models, and to compare these to patients who receive ART
directly from the clinic at three month intervals.
Methods
A prospective, parallel, cluster-randomized non-inferiority trial with three study arms will
be conducted. 30 Clusters (sites) will be randomized in strata according to geographic
location (urban and rural) to the 3 study arms as follows:
- Control arm: sites at which patients will receive three monthly ART supply at the
facility (arm 3MF).
- Intervention arm 1: sites at which patients will receive three monthly ART supply in
CAGs (arm 3MC)
- Intervention arm 2: sites at which patients will receive six monthly ART supply in the
community by a healthcare worker (arm 6MCD).
Sites for inclusion in the study will be selected at which it is deemed to be feasible to
implement multi-month dispensing of ART in the community.
The study population will consist of stable, HIV-infected adults who have received first-line
ART for at least six months, who have a viral load <1000 copies/ml at baseline, and who
provide informed consent for inclusion in the study. An average of 192 participants from each
study site will be included, with a total sample size of approximately 5760 participants. For
those sites randomized to the 3MC arm, enrolled participants will be part of a CAG for the
duration of the study. For those sites randomized to the 6MCD arm, enrolled participants will
be dispensed a 6-month supply of ART in the community by a healthcare worker in between their
annual clinical assessments. All participants will have a clinical assessment and viral load
testing at the clinic at least annually, and participants will be followed-up for 24 months
after enrolment.
The primary outcome is retention in care defined as the proportion of patients remaining in
care 12 months after study enrolment, with the hypothesis that patient retention within the
intervention arms will be non-inferior compared to the control arm. Retention in care will
also be compared between the three arms after 24 months.
The secondary outcomes are:
- Viral suppression: defined as the proportion of patients with virological suppression
(<1000 copies/ml) 12 and 24 months after study enrolment;
- Cost of providing ART: defined as the cost per patient of providing ART in each of the
three arms (from a provider perspective);
- Cost of retaining a patient: defined as the provider cost per patient retained and
provider cost per patient retained with virological suppression in each of the three
arms, and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for the comparative arms.
Qualitative research will include assessing the acceptability of multi-month dispensing of
ART within CAGs and the community from both a patient and healthcare provider perspective.
Costs to patients will be compared between the three arms from data derived from patient
surveys. In addition, indicators of potential facility level decongestion will be compared
between arms, which will include the median facility patient waiting time and average monthly
number of patients newly initiated on ART, with data derived from site surveys and routine
facility-level data.
This study will follow the ethical considerations specified by the Lesotho National Health
Research and Ethics Committee.
The results of the study are expected to inform health policy both nationally and regionally
regarding the effectiveness of implementing a package of services consisting of MMD within
CAGs and community distribution together with viral load monitoring for stable ART patients.
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