HIV Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
Infant Male Circumcision in Gaborone, Botswana, and Surrounding Areas: Feasibility, Safety and Acceptability
Background: Novel HIV prevention approaches are urgently needed in Botswana and elsewhere in
sub-Saharan Africa. Although adult male circumcision (MC) has been shown to reduce the
heterosexual acquisition of HIV by men by about 60%, MC in infancy is optimal for its
relative ease, lower cost and low rate of complications. We have conducted focus groups and
semi-structured interviews that suggest neonatal MC (< 28 days of life) would be an
acceptable public HIV prevention strategy in Botswana. The government of Botswana is
committed to scaling up MC services in the immediate future and they plan to include
neonates. Understanding decision-making around infant MC will be essential to maximize the
effectiveness of this HIV prevention strategy.
Specific Aims: The investigators propose to: 1) determine the acceptability and actual
uptake of neonatal MC in southeastern Botswana and identify barriers to uptake; 2) ascertain
the feasibility and safety of neonatal MC in Botswana; 3) Estimate what, if any, advantages
would exist for scale up of Mogen Clamp, Plastibell or AccuCirc with regard to human
resources, equipment needs, adverse events and acceptability to health-care providers and
families in Botswana.
Study Design and Schema: The investigators will conduct structured interviews with early
postpartum mothers and fathers to determine correlates of neonatal MC acceptability and
uptake, defined as neonatal MC following informed consent. Male infants will be circumcised
by a trained doctor in a hospital / clinic setting by one of three FDA-approved devices that
are currently in use in US hospitals: Mogen clamp, Plastibell or AccuCirc. Circumcision with
Mogen Clamp or Plastibell will be done before 29 days of life. Circumcision with AccuCirc
will be done before 11 days of life (FDA approval limit for device). The investigators will
also administer questionnaires to the parents at the regular pediatric follow-up visit(s) to
assess impressions of / satisfaction with the infant's procedure outcome over time. Provider
impressions of the three methods will also be evaluated. Sample size will be 150 infants per
arm for a total of 450 infants males circumcised (and an estimated 800 parental
questionnaires).
Public Health Significance: The World Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS state that
countries with severe, generalized HIV epidemics but low rates of MC should offer this
surgery as an important, evidence-based HIV prevention intervention, including among
neonates. These two agencies also recommended that additional research on the most feasible,
safe, and sustainable ways of scaling up MC intervention should be performed. This study
will be in keeping with these recommendations.
Please note the Mogen clamp and Plastibell study arms began as a randomized trial before the
initiation of the AccuCirc single-arm portion. Although the settings in which the three
devices were studied were similar, the AccuCirc trial enrollment began at two sites
(Gaborone and Molepolole) only after completion of the Mogen clamp and Plastibell arms,
which was conducted in three sites (Gaborone, Molepolole and Mochudi). Although Lobatse was
a site for the first acceptability study with mothers, no procedures were performed there.
Regarding the reported sample size: the total, final sample size includes both parents of
newborn boys (because enrolled consenting parents completed questionnaires as part of this
study), and boys whose parents consented to circumcision. We anticipated that not all
parents who completed the questionnaire would consent to circumcising their baby; therefore,
when planning the study it was necessary to estimate the number of parents who would
participate in the survey (700), to achieve an enrollment of 300 neonates (therefore the
initial estimate of 1000). The original study in fact enrolled 302 infants, 600 mothers and
19 fathers (total study population 921). The addition of the AccuCirc arm led to a revised
estimate of total number of neonates and their parents (total=1250). The final enrollment
was of 1,235 participants, that includes all the participating neonates and parents.
n/a
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
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