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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Active, not recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04571684
Other study ID # R01MH121245
Secondary ID R01MH121245
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date October 5, 2020
Est. completion date November 30, 2024

Study information

Verified date October 2023
Source University of Kansas Medical Center
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The goal of this project is to rigorously evaluate the efficacy of HIV Infant Tracking System 2.1 (HITSystem, an eHealth intervention that uses short message service (SMS) texts to patients and algorithm-driven electronic alerts for providers) to increase retention in guideline-adherent prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV services (PMTCT) and to increase viral suppression and appropriate clinical action through the extended period of 6 months postpartum, compared to standard of care PMTCT services in a matched, cluster randomized controlled trial.


Description:

Despite progress in providing comprehensive prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) services, significant gaps in the timely uptake and provision of guideline-adherent services and maternal retention in care remain. Such gaps create missed opportunities for preventing mother-to-child transmission and result in nearly 6,100 infants becoming infected with HIV each year in Kenya. Effective interventions that routinize the delivery of evidence-based PMTCT services and foster consistent patient engagement are essential to close the remaining gaps and eliminate mother-to-child transmission of HIV. Building off of a successful R34 grant to develop and pilot test the HITSystem 2.0, an eHealth intervention targeting PMTCT services, the overall goal of this proposal is to use a cluster randomized control design at 12 Kenyan government hospitals to evaluate a modified HITSystem 2.1 intervention. HITSystem 2.1 reflects the 2018 Kenyan PMTCT guidelines, including routine viral load monitoring and interventions to suppress maternal viral load. The investigators aim to evaluate the impact of HITSystem 2.1 to optimize the provision of guideline-adherent services and viral suppression through the antenatal, delivery, and early postpartum periods. Aim 1 of the proposed study will assess the efficacy of the HITSystem 2.1 to increase the proportion of mothers who receive complete PMTCT services (including appointment attendance, medication adherence support, viral load testing, hospital-based delivery, and infant testing per Kenyan National Guidelines) through 6 months postpartum. The investigators hypothesize that mothers receiving the HITSystem 2.1 intervention will have a significantly higher completion rate for guideline-adherence PMTCT services compared to mothers receiving standard of care PMTCT services. In Aim 1b, the investigators will evaluate HITSystem 2.1 implementation using the RE-AIM model to inform sustainable scale up. Aim 2 will assess the efficacy of HITSystem 2.1 to increase viral suppression (<1,000 copies/mL) among pregnant and postpartum women, including those who disengage from care. The investigators hypothesize that mothers at HITSystem 2.1 sites will have higher rates of viral suppression at delivery and 6 months postpartum. Aim 3 will evaluate the cost-effectiveness of the HITSystem 2.1. Driven by differences in PMTCT retention, viral suppression, and modeled estimates of pediatric HIV infections averted, the investigators hypothesize that the HITSystem 2.1 will be cost-effective, based on World Health Organization criteria. This proposal is aimed at improving the quality of PMTCT services in the health facility setting. If efficacious and cost-effective, HITSystem 2.1 holds strong promise for national dissemination.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Active, not recruiting
Enrollment 1648
Est. completion date November 30, 2024
Est. primary completion date January 29, 2024
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Female
Age group N/A and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Pregnant women living with HIV who present for care at one of the study hospitals by 36 weeks gestation and provide written informed consent are eligible for enrollment in the study. Exclusion Criteria: - Pregnant women living with HIV will be excluded from study participation if she has any condition (including drug abuse, alcohol abuse, or psychiatric disorder) that study or hospital staff feel precludes her from providing informed consent. - Women who transfer care from one study site to another during their PMTCT services will be ineligible for enrollment at their new facility.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
HITSystem 2.1
HITSystem 2.1 is an intervention that tracks HIV+ pregnant women and their infants to improve the completeness and efficiency of PMTCT services. Key intervention features include: (1) SMS messages sent to enrolled women and mothers to support essential PMTCT services, (2) automated, algorithm-driven alerts for providers when per-guidelines PMTCT services are missed, and (3) automatic enrollment of infants into early infant diagnosis (EID) and linkage with maternal PMTCT file at documentation of infant birth to improve the continuum of care for HIV+ mothers and HIV-exposed infants. The HITSystem 2.1 intervention aims to facilitate complete PMTCT retention and viral load (VL) monitoring with prompt clinical action (adherence support, antiretroviral therapy (ART) regimen change) in the antenatal, delivery, and 6-month postpartum periods to increase viral suppression during windows critical for HIV prevention.

Locations

Country Name City State
Kenya Ambira Subcounty Hospital Ambira Siaya
Kenya Bondo Subcounty Hospital Bondo Siaya
Kenya Likoni Subcounty Hospital Likoni Mombasa
Kenya Malanga Subcounty Hospital Malanga Siaya
Kenya Mariakani Subcounty Hospital Mariakani Kilifi
Kenya Mtwapa Subcounty Hospital Mtwapa Kilifi
Kenya Akala Subcounty Hospital Siaya
Kenya Siaya County Hospital Siaya
Kenya Sigomere Health Center Sigomere Siaya
Kenya Ukwala Subcounty Hospital Ukwala Siaya
Kenya Vipingo Subcounty Hospital Vipingo Kilifi
Kenya Yala Subcounty Hospital Yala Siaya

Sponsors (5)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Kansas Medical Center Children's Mercy Hospital Kansas City, Global Health Innovations Foundation - Kenya, Kenya Medical Research Institute, National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Kenya, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Proportion receiving complete PMTCT documented receipt of all of the following: maternal ART initiation, antenatal appointment attendance, facility delivery, EID linkage by 7 weeks of age, maternal viral load testing and clinical action per national guidelines through 6 months postpartum (Table 6). Participants who receive all indicated services per guidelines will be coded as 1 or 'yes'. Participants missing > 1 service will be coded as 0 or incomplete PMTCT services. 7-15 months (PMTCT enrollment date through 6 months postpartum)
Primary Viral suppression the proportion of clients with a suppressed viral load(<1000 copies/mL) at delivery and within 6 months postpartum 1-15 months, (first VL test and followed through 6 months postpartum)
Primary Cost-effectiveness Quality of Life Years Saved for infants and mothers Years 2 and 4
Secondary PMTCT retention duration (weeks) The number of weeks women were engaged in PMTCT serves 7-15 months (PMTCT enrollment date through 6 months postpartum)
Secondary Antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence The proportion with ART adherence > 95% 7-15 months (PMTCT enrollment date through 6 months postpartum)
Secondary Viral load test coverage The proportion of women receiving baseline and repeat viral load tests per guidelines. 7-15 months (PMTCT enrollment date through 6 months postpartum)
Secondary Viral load test utility Proportion of detectable viral load results with clinical action per guidelines, such as: intensified adherence counseling and/or ARV regimen change 7-15 months (PMTCT enrollment date through 6 months postpartum)
Secondary Turnaround time of viral load results and patient notification The number of weeks from the date of sample collection to results 7-15 months (PMTCT enrollment date through 6 months postpartum)
Secondary Turnaround time of viral load patient notification The number of weeks from the date of results to the date of patient notification 7-15 months (PMTCT enrollment date through 6 months postpartum)
Secondary Moderators of HITSystem 2.1 effectiveness Identify potential patient factors (age, education, income, disclosure, PMTCT knowledge, motivation to engage and complete PMTCT, perceived partner support, depression [modified Edinburgh postnatal scale]) and/or provider factors (gender, age, knowledge of PMTCT guidelines, perceived complexity of guidelines, motivation to provide guideline adherent care, workload, perception of the quality of patient care), and facility factors (resource level, patient volume, number of providers), that moderate the primary outcomes of complete PMTCT retention and viral load suppression. Baseline, delivery, 6 months postpartum (participants), Pre and post study implementation (provider and facility assessment)
Secondary Mediators of HITSystem 2.1 effectiveness Identify potential patient factors (disclosure status, PMTCT knowledge, motivation to engage and complete PMTCT, perceived partner support, depression (modified Edinburgh postnatal scale) and/or provider factors (knowledge of PMTCT guidelines, perceived complexity of guidelines, motivation to provide guideline adherent care, workload, perception of the quality of patient care) that mediate the primary outcomes of complete PMTCT retention and viral load suppression. Baseline, delivery, 6 months postpartum (participants), Pre and Post study implementation (providers)
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