Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02907697 |
Other study ID # |
K23DA039037 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 1, 2016 |
Est. completion date |
December 30, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
July 2022 |
Source |
University of Texas at Austin |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Many people living with HIV use illicit drugs, which leads to worsened health outcomes and
increased transmission of HIV due to poor adherence to medication regimens. This research
will develop an intervention targeting medication adherence that is tailored to the unique
needs of HIV-infected drug users. This research will promote adherence and improve treatment
outcomes among HIV-infected drug users thereby minimizing the development of drug resistant
strains of HIV and reducing transmission.
Description:
This K23 research and training award advances the long-term goal of improving treatment
outcomes and reducing transmission of HIV among HIV-infected drug users. The proposed
training and research plans will enable the PI to develop the skills needed for an
independent research career in the area of illicit drug use and HIV adherence intervention.
The objective of this award is to develop skills in implementation science, behavioral
intervention development and evaluation with drug using populations, and in-depth qualitative
data analysis to accelerate refinement and effective implementation of interventions for
HIV-infected drug users. Multiple comorbidities such as drug use and HIV act synergistically
to produce poorer health outcomes and increase morbidity, mortality, and transmission of HIV.
Consequently, effective and sustainable interventions adapted to drug users to improve
antiretroviral medication adherence and reduce risk behaviors are urgently needed. Drug users
present unique treatment challenges compared with other HIV-infected populations, including
lower rates of adherence and inferior treatment outcomes. Additionally, interpersonal
factors, including social support, negative patient-provider interactions, and socioeconomic
challenges present significant barriers to adherence. Thus, the generalizability of current
adherence interventions to drug users is limited, and there is a pressing need for
efficacious interventions adapted to HIV-infected drug using populations. This project
addresses this gap by being the first to adapt and test the acceptability and efficacy of a
combined adherence and brief motivational intervention for HIV-infected drug users.
Specifically, the intervention will augment the established Life Steps adherence intervention
to include: (1) a tailored Life Steps module addressing the unique needs of illicit drug
users, aimed at improving medication adherence; (2) a brief Motivational Interview to address
drug use and other risk behaviors; and (3) two follow-up booster sessions. A three-phase,
top-down research approach to adapt, refine, and pilot test the intervention will be
conducted. Phase 1 will include focus groups with HIV-infected drug users currently
prescribed antiretroviral medications and individual interviews with community-based
clinicians. Phase 2 will include manual development, therapist training, a pilot trial,
in-depth qualitative interviews, and further manual revisions. Phase 3 will include a small,
2-armed (intervention vs. health education control) randomized controlled trial with 60
HIV-infected drug users. Feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary indication of
improvement in antiretroviral adherence and reduction in drug use will be examined at 1-, 3-,
and 6-month follow-ups. To enable the PI to pursue this long-term research agenda, she will
work with experienced mentors to build three areas of expertise: (1) proficiency in
qualitative research methods and analysis; (2) skills in intervention development and
evaluation with illicit drug using populations; (3) expertise in advanced longitudinal data
analysis; and (4) implementation science. This K23 study addresses a key priority in HIV
treatment science, and it will fully prepare the PI for an independent research career as an
HIV intervention scientist.