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Clinical Trial Summary

The study design is a single-site, two-arm, randomized, open-label crossover trial in 30 AGYW aged 16-24 in Chitungwiza (Harare), Zimbabwe. The aim of the study is to assess the acceptability of, preference for, and adherence to a single DPP capsule containing one PrEP tablet and one COC tablet compared to two separate tablets (FTC/TDF and EE/LNG), each taken for three consecutive menstrual cycles for a total of 24 weeks among current COC users.


Clinical Trial Description

We will conduct a randomized, open-label, parallel group, 2-way crossover study among approximately 30 girls and young women (AGYW) aged 16-24 years old to compare adherence, preference, acceptability and safety of a single dual prevention pill (DPP) containing Truvada and the generic COC, Zinnia F (Regimen A), versus Truvada and Zinnia F taken separately (Regimen B). All participants must already be using COCs for at least 3 months prior to screening and must plan to continue using them for at least one year. We are enrolling women who are already using COCs because we believe they are most likely to be interested in a daily oral MPT. Furthermore, we would like participants who are already accustomed to COCs so that they can have a clearer sense of how PrEP - whether taken separately or in the DPP - makes them feel. Prior to the commencement of the study, the Population Council procured and qualified all study drugs required for the crossover study, including: bulk pills (Truvada and Zinnia F) for encapsulation, COC pill packs, and bottles of Truvada. Under the guidance of the Council's clinical and regulatory groups, PCI Pharma (Rockford, IL, USA) over-encapsulated Truvada and Zinnia F according to Good Manufacturing Practices. The over-encapsulated pills were then blister packaged, pouched, and kitted for distribution to participants. The DPP regimen (A) consists of a kit containing 4 pouches with a 28-day supply of over-encapsulated pills; 21 pink and white capsules will contain Truvada over-encapsulated together with a COC; the other 7 capsules, corresponding to the 7 placebo days in a COC pill pack, will be white and will contain Truvada only. The provider counseling manual will emphasize the fact that unlike a COC pill pack where 7 pills are placebo, all of the pills in the regimen contain Truvada, so it will be important to take them for all 28 days. For Regimen B, participants will receive a 28-day blister pack of Zinnia F, as is currently marketed, with 21 active pills and 7 placebo pills. Truvada will be dispensed in bottles of 30 pills, as is currently marketed. Participants will be instructed to take one Truvada tablet and one COC table daily for 28 days. After providing written informed consent (or assent, with parental consent, for non-emancipated 16-17-year-old girls), women will be screened for eligibility. Participants can be enrolled if they are sexually-active (defined as having had penile-vaginal sex with a male ≤3 months before screening), currently using a COC that was started ≥3 months before screening, HIV-negative (based on HIV rapid test at screening), not-pregnant (based on hCG urine test at screening), have no contraindications for PrEP or COCs, and are in good health based on medical history and vital signs. PrEP screening will follow the standard of care in Zimbabwe, which recommends testing for Hepatitis B, hepatitis C, complete blood count (CBC), blood creatinine levels, pregnancy, and STIs. Women who test positive for pregnancy or HIV will be referred per the local standard of care. Participants who test positive for a curable STI will be treated and enrolled. Participants who are eligible will be scheduled for an enrollment visit on Day 0 of their menstrual cycle. At enrollment, women will be randomly assigned to one of two sequences of the two regimens, with all women using both regimens by the end of the crossover study. The Population Council study biostatistician created the randomization scheme using Statistical Analysis Software (SAS/STAT) version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, North Carolina) with a 1:1 allocation using permutated block sizes. 15 participants will be assigned to Sequence 1: DPP capsules (Regimen A) in period 1, and two separate tablets (Regimen B) in period 2, and 15 participants will be assigned to Sequence 2: Regimen B in period 1 and Regimen A in period 2. Randomization will be in blocks of 10, with 5 participants assigned to each sequence in each of the 3 blocks. Participants will use each regimen for 3 28-day menstrual cycles and will then switch to the second regimen at their crossover visit. Participants will attend a total of up to 8 clinic visits including Screening, Enrollment and monthly follow up visits for up to 7 months. No wash-out period is required between regimens. At Visit 1, prior to initiating product use, participants will be asked to complete a baseline behavioral interview and will be asked which regimen they think they will prefer. At all other visits, participants will complete behavioral interviews (approximately 30 minutes) about adherence and acceptability. All behavioral interviews will be conducted using computer assisted self-interviewing (CASI), which has been shown to elicit more truthful reporting than face-to-face interviewing. At the end of the Crossover period, participants will complete their final CASI interview, in which they will be asked to 1) state their preference for the DPP or 2 separate pills; 2) to qualify the strength of their preference on a scale of 1-10; All of the participants who complete the study and anyone who withdraws early will be asked to take part in an in-depth interview to explore qualitatively reasons for continuation and discontinuation, as well as the influence of partners, family, support structures, side effects, provider interactions and other factors on cMPT choice and adherence. At all follow up visits, women will be tested for HIV and pregnancy, report adverse events (AEs) and have a clinical exam, if necessary, and respond to a structured questionnaire via computer assisted self-interview (CASI) with questions about acceptability, preference, and adherence. At the end of the Crossover period, women will be asked to state which regimen they prefer. Accrual is estimated to take approximately 6 months from first participant enrolling to last participant completing the study. We will assess and compare PrEP acceptability and adherence by regimen and overall, and we will investigate if specific socio-ecological factors (e.g., individual-, partner-, family-, and clinic-level) are associated with adherence and acceptability. We will also explore facilitators and barriers to use by conducting in-depth interviews with a subset of willing participants who complete the study and any women who withdraws early. Furthermore, because we assume people are predisposed to judge a specific regimen or technology based on initial impressions, we will assess if pre-use preferences are associated with actual experiences and preferences after using each regimen. At each visit, women will be tested for pregnancy and HIV and will provide a blood sample for DBS to assess drug levels/adherence to PrEP. Adverse events will be recorded during the study, although no pharmacokinetic interactions are expected because there are no drug-drug interactions between the reverse transcriptase inhibitors tenofovir and emtricitabine, and the contraceptive hormones levonorgestrel and ethinyl estradiol. In addition, the side effects profiles of the two products are similar; the most commonly reported side-effects for both Truvada® and COCs are headache and nausea. Since we are recruiting women who are already using COCs, participants will already be accustomed to side-effects of COCs. Participants will be encouraged to contact or visit the clinic with questions or concerns between visits. Rapid HIV testing will be done at screening, in accordance with local guidelines. Pregnancy will be tested based on hCG levels in urine. DBS collected from enrolled participants will be sent to the University of Cape Town where tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) drug levels will be measured to evaluate adherence based on expected levels for daily use. Quantitative and qualitative behavioral collection instruments will adhere to our theoretical framework for assessing acceptability, with questions adapted from previous HIV-prevention studies, as relevant. In-depth interview guides will be developed from instruments used in previous PrEP introduction studies and tailored for this study. Quantitative data from the CASI behavioral interviews will be saved at the site in .csv (comma separated value) format and shared with Population Council weekly via encrypted zip files. Clinical data collected from participants, including background demographics; medical and pregnancy history; vital signs; concomitant medications; AEs; enrollment and termination dates; and records of returned unused pills will be entered into REDCap, an electronic data system. Data from CASI interviews, eCRFs and DBS analysis will be formatted into SAS data sets for analysis. Descriptive statistics (frequencies, mean, standard deviation, range) will be used to summarize data collected and to characterize differences in participants assigned to each Sequence. Modeling will be used to assess the impact of background characteristics on adherence, preference and acceptability. PC conducted site initiation and training for the crossover study in collaboration with UZ-CTRC, which has extensive experience implementing qualitative and quantitative HIV prevention research studies. The Population Council and site coordinator have weekly teleconferences and the full teams are meeting monthly during data collection to discuss and resolve any issues as they occur. The PC clinical research associate will make periodic monitoring trips during data collection to ensure the safety of participants and adherence to the protocol. The PC team will also review data collected on a weekly basis. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04778514
Study type Interventional
Source Population Council
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date December 7, 2022
Completion date September 11, 2023

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