Adherence to Medication Regime Clinical Trial
Official title:
Demonstration Project of Early Antiretroviral Therapy and Pre-exposure Prophylaxis for HIV Prevention Among Female Sex Workers in Cotonou, Benin
In the last few years, early treatment of HIV-infected individuals, or "treatment as
prevention (TasP), and pre-exposure prophylaxis with antiretroviral drugs among HIV-negative
people at very high-risk of acquiring the infection (PrEP) have emerged as highly promising
biological preventive interventions to tackle the HIV pandemic within the framework of
combination prevention, a multi-component strategy that has been promoted for the last five
years. In West Africa, the evidence strongly suggests that female sex workers (FSWs)
contribute very disproportionally to the HIV spread. This is why the investigators propose
this TasP and PrEP demonstration project in Benin, where our group has been involved in HIV
prevention research in the sex work milieu for the last two decades.
After a run-in phase for community preparedness and the development of a specific education
program on adherence, the investigators plan to recruit 100 HIV-infected FSWs in the TasP
component of the project (these women will receive a first-line antiretroviral treatment
(ART) regimen as per the Benin guidelines) and 250 HIV-negative FSWs in the PrEP component
(these women will receive Truvada®). The recruitment period will last for one year, followed
by an additional one year of follow-up, for a total follow-up period varying between 12 and
24 months, depending on when a given woman is recruited in the study. During follow-up visits
every three months, the investigators will closely monitor treatment adherence and changes in
sexual behaviour, including the use of viral load testing among TasP participants and
Truvada® plasma level testing for PrEP participants, as well as detection of
prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and Y-chromosome DNA in vaginal fluids in all participants.
The investigators will evaluate the feasibility of TasP and PrEP through a set of indicators,
including uptake, coverage, adherence, condom migration, occurrence of side effects and
development of drug resistance, whereas mathematical modeling will be used to predict the
potential impact of both interventions in the sex work milieu and the general population,
based on the actual set of indicators observed. The study will be completed by an economic
evaluation of the interventions and a cost-effectiveness analysis.
Finally, the investigators will disseminate the results to the study population and to the
Beninese health authorities and ensure the broad implementation of these interventions in
Benin if the demonstration project shows that they are feasible and relevant.
At the end of 2012, sub-Saharan Africa was home to 71% of the 35.3 million people living with
HIV worldwide. Despite all the preventive and therapeutic efforts accomplished so far, the
epidemic is persisting with approximately 1,600,000 new HIV infections occurring yearly in
this region that is characterized by different epidemiological profiles. In West Africa, the
epidemic is disproportionally concentrated among female sex workers (FSWs) who are involved
directly or indirectly in 75% to 90% of HIV transmission cases towards the general population
through "bridging" populations, essentially their clients and other male sexual partners.
Hence, to achieve the control of the epidemic in this sub-region, especially in West Africa
where the epidemic is much less generalized than in many other parts of the continent, it is
important to tailor combination prevention including behavioural, structural, and biological
components for the sex work milieu in general and FSWs in particular, in addition to ensuring
adequate treatment of those already HIV-infected. However, despite substantial efforts in
usual prevention methods in the last 10 years and effective reductions in the prevalence of
HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) with concomitant increases in condom use
in some countries, HIV prevalence is still high among FSWs in West Africa, with these highly
vulnerable women having an HIV prevalence over 12 times higher than other women of
reproductive age. Such a situation could constitute a threat to the progress achieved in
controlling the HIV epidemic in this region.
Recently, in addition to previous preventive methods, such as consistent condom use and male
circumcision, early treatment (treatment as prevention, TasP) has been shown to decrease HIV
transmission by 96% in serodiscordant couples, whereas pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) based
on Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate or on the latter drug plus Emtricitabine (Truvada®) has been
found to be 45 to 75% protective against HIV acquisition in four randomized controlled trials
when used orally; no protection at all was observed in two trials conducted among women at
high risk in African countries. These failures have now been shown to be mainly related to
issues of poor adherence to the study drugs rather than poor biological efficacy. On the
other hand, when combining data from several trials, the level of protection against HIV
acquisition reached 90% among the sub-groups of trial participants achieving high levels of
compliance. Based on the generally positive results obtained. Truvada® is now approved for
PrEP by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the USA. According to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, PrEP is largely considered a preventive individual-level
intervention. However, it could potentially also have an impact at the population-level and
help control the HIV epidemic if rolled out and adopted on a large scale for HIV prevention,
especially among the most vulnerable populations. However, the feasibility of this approach
is somewhat questioned by the low treatment adherence levels achieved in trials recruiting
specifically highly vulnerable women in Africa. On the other hand, TasP can be viewed as a
more classical public health intervention, as its population-level impact will largely depend
on the coverage achieved in people at risk of transmitting HIV. However, the trial
demonstrating TasP efficacy was carried out in serodiscordant couples, a population where
treatment adherence may well be higher than in high-risk women who do not have a stable
partner and who have shown lower levels of compliance than most other groups in the PrEP
trials.
So far, antiretroviral therapy (ART) for all HIV-infected people, irrespective of their CD4
levels or clinical status (equivalent to TasP), is only recommended in the USA. However, the
World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) have
recently changed their recommendations on HIV treatment initiation of HIV positive
individuals, increasing the eligibility criteria to treat when CD4 levels reach 500 cells/mm3
compared to the previously recommended threshold of CD4<350 cells/mm3. However, these changes
have so far not been widely implemented at the country-level. Despite the proven efficacy of
TasP and PrEP as prevention strategies in clinical trials, their efficiency must be evaluated
in 'real life' situations, in various countries with specific cultural contexts, largely
because the uptake of HIV testing, the acceptance of early treatment and PrEP as well as drug
adherence may vary considerably according to personal, social and cultural characteristics,
as clearly reflected by the variability in PrEP trial results. The absence of clear
recommendations on both prevention strategies in different countries is partly due to the
lack of evidence based on real world implementation especially amongst FSWs. The
investigators are thus proposing this demonstration project among FSWs in Cotonou, Benin, to
identify the best way to successfully implement TasP and PrEP in this specific setting. Benin
is facing a concentrated epidemic with HIV prevalence estimated at 1.2% in a recent general
population household survey, whereas HIV prevalence was estimated at 21% among FSWs in the
latest integrated biological and behavioural survey (IBBS) carried out in 2012.
The project will use a field approach readily inserted within an ongoing combination
prevention intervention, including clinical (for ex.: HIV testing and care, STI care) ,
behavioural (for ex.: non-governmental organization- and peer-led condom promotion) and
structural components (for ex.: community empowerment, advocacy to decrease police
harassment; community development activities leading to the constitution of FSW-led community
based organizations), that the investigators implement in close collaboration with the
National AIDS Control Programme (NACP) in most of the major cities and towns of Benin through
a grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). The Dispensaire IST (DIST), a
STI clinic dedicated to FSWs in Cotonou, will be the study clinic for this project.
TasP makes sense as a public health intervention as long as high levels of coverage are
achieved in the high-frequency transmitter population targeted by this intervention. Hence,
the TasP component of the project will benefit from the ongoing CIHR/NACP interventions aimed
at increasing HIV testing among FSWs. Indeed, within this context, the investigators are
currently carrying out a study on the determinants of regular HIV testing, based on the
Theory of planned behaviour. The results of this study will be used to develop an education
program promoting 3-monthly HIV testing among FSWs that will be ready to implement prior to
the beginning of recruitment in the proposed study. The development of this program will use
the intervention mapping approach. Its implementation is already planned in all the coverage
area of our ongoing CIHR project. The latter project will also contribute by defining precise
indicators of success specifically for professional FSWs (e.g. those whose main source of
income is sex work who will constitute our target population), based on accurate estimations
of their population size. Indeed, the investigators are currently conducting a detailed
scientific mapping of the FSW population in the cities and towns covered by our ongoing
intervention. The results of this size estimation study will be available before the end of
2013 and will be used to establish the denominators for the testing and TasP coverage
indicators.
Contrary to TasP, PrEP is an individual preventive intervention for which the coverage level
is of less importance. However, as the investigators are expecting that at least 60% of
HIV-negative FSWs will accept PrEP, it may also have preventive benefits at the overall FSW
population level. We have decided to combine TasP and PrEP in the same project for efficiency
and ethical reasons. Indeed, this approach implies that all FSWs consulting at the project
clinics will be offered some form of antiretroviral drugs with provision of adherence
counseling. In addition, on an ethical point of view and considering the community
perspective, it would be difficult to justify an approach where antiretroviral drugs would be
given to HIV-negative women while asymptomatic HIV-positive FSWs with >350 CD4/mm³ are not
treated. Note that according to the current Benin national guidelines, ART is provided for
free to HIV-infected subjects with CD4<350 CD4/mm³, but this could change during the course
of the study following the recently revised WHO guidelines proposing a threshold of 500
CD4/mm³ for treatment eligibility.
The proposed project is planned for three years: a 6-month phase-in period (submission of the
project to all relevant ethics committees, community preparedness activities, conduction of a
study on the determinants of the intention to adhere to ART regimens, for both HIV-positive
and HIV-negative women, and development of an adherence education program based on
theoretical frameworks and approaches similar to the ones used for the education program on
regular testing mentioned above, development of study procedures), a 25-month follow-up
period (including 12 months of active recruitment, and follow-up varying between 12 and 24
months) and a 5-month phase-out period to complete all the data entry, carry out the data
analysis and disseminate the study results.
In the catchment area of the DIST, the investigators estimate that there are approximately
600 professional FSWs. Overall, the investigators are expecting to reach approximately 500
FSWs and to recruit and follow-up at least 90% of the HIV-positive (n~100) and at least 60%
of the HIV-negative under PreP (n~250). Women eligible to ART under current guidelines and
asymptomatic women with CD4 >350 cells/mm³ (TasP component) will be offered locally approved
first line ART regimens while HIV-negative ones (PrEP component) will receive Truvada®. For
all the analyses on TasP, the investigators will compare the women enrolled under the TasP
component to those treated based on current national guidelines. Pregnant women and those
still breastfeeding will be excluded from the PrEP component of the project. Women eligible
to ART under current guidelines will receive their drugs through the NACP program, while
those on TasP or PrEP will be supplied in drugs by this project.
In order to assess the potential impact of the combined TasP and PrEP interventions, the
investigators will first compare the HIV incidence observed during the study to the 1.4 per
100 person-years incidence estimate from a follow-up study carried out among FSWs in Cotonou
in the early 2010s. However, more importantly in terms of impact assessment, the
investigators will use sophisticated carefully calibrated mathematical modelling techniques
to estimate the impact of the intervention and each component on HIV transmission amongst
FSWs, their clients and the general population, following modelling and impact assessment
approaches previously developed for Cotonou and for the evaluation of Avahan, the India AIDS
Initiative of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Finally, the investigators will carry out prospective top down and patient level cost data
collection mainly using a provider perspective approach, but also some patients perspective
elements, and combine cost estimates with modeled impact projections in order to estimate the
incremental cost-effectiveness of TasP and/or PrEP per HIV infection and disability adjusted
life years (DALY) averted. Regression analysis will be used to determine if patient level
costs are related to FSW characteristics (frequency of commercial sex, level of condom use,
duration of sex work or age, and CD4 cell count at initiation of ART), ART provider or
TasP/PrEP adherence and outcomes, and if deemed important these heterogeneities in the costs
will be incorporated in modelling.
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