HIV Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Clinical Trial Evaluating the Role of Contingent Reinforcement in the Engagement of and Retention of Drug Users in HAART Programs
In many urban centres including Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, there is a high rate of HIV
infection among users of illicit drugs. Among drug users who present to care and start highly
active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), retention in care and adherence to their treatment
regimen may be less than optimal. Given the known benefits of HAART on both the individual
and populational levels, new strategies are required to help retain HIV-infected drug users
on HAART.
Contingency management (CM) is a strategy to affect behaviour by providing a reward (e.g.
money) to reinforce the desired behaviour. CM has been used with success in other areas of
medicine (e.g. smoking cessation, weight loss) and in the drug using population, but has not
been established as a means to improve retention in HAART programs.
The proposed research primarily seeks to assess the effectiveness of monetary-based CM in
retaining HIV-infected drug users in HAART programs. 240 HAART-eligible subjects will be
randomized in a 2:1 ratio to either receive (n=160) the reinforcer or to a control arm
(n=80). All subjects will receive HAART and standard care, and those randomized to the
reinforcer arm will receive escalating reinforcement initially for attendance at each clinic
visit (until month 6 after starting HAART) and subsequently (until month 12 after starting
HAART) will receive an escalating variable reinforcer for each month in which a plasma viral
load less than or equal to 100 copies/mL is maintained.
Our hypotheses are that drug users initiating HAART and randomly selected to receive a
reinforcer for attending clinic visits then maintaining monthly virologic suppression during
the first 52 weeks after HAART initiation will be significantly more likely to achieve
virologic suppression at 52 weeks, will have a significantly longer duration of sustained
virologic suppression during the first 52 weeks, and will be significantly more likely to
maintain virologic suppression at 72 weeks after HAART initiation, than those not offered a
reinforcer.
Once HAART has been initiated, participants will be expected to be assessed at weeks
1,2,3,4,6,8,10,12,14, and 16. Detailed adherence and dispensing records for all
antiretroviral medications for each participant will be maintained. Adherence will be
assessed primarily on the basis of pharmacy refill records, as well as self-report.
Subsequently participants will attend monthly clinical follow-up visits at weeks 20, 24, 28,
32, 36, 40, 44, 48, and 52. Standard laboratory monitoring will be performed at that time,
and will include complete blood count (CBC), differential, basic chemistry, liver and kidney
profile, as well as CD4 cell count and plasma HIV-1-RNA level, consistent with current care
guidelines. All patients will also undergo urine toxicology screens at baseline and quarterly
(weeks 12, 24, 36, and 52) in order to assess any effects of engaging in HAART programs on
substance use. Follow-up will also include an adverse events assessment (ADE) from a
standardized list of signs and symptoms noted by either the patient or practitioner or
identified through laboratory testing. At baseline and each quarterly visit, participants
will complete the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) where a score of
16 correlates with risk of depression. This tool has been validated in our population in a
prior study. Participants will also complete the Addiction Severity Index questionnaire, a
validated instrument used to examine severity of psychosocial problems in seven domains
including drug and alcohol use . Composite scores are derived, and higher scores reflect
greater problems. Past 3-month versions of the HIV Risk Behavior Scale will also be
administered at baseline and at quarterly visits. This scale assesses injection drug use and
sexual behaviors, and responses are coded on a 6-point scale with higher values indicating
higher risk.
Participants who are randomized to receive a reinforcer for clinic follow-up will receive the
reinforcer at the end of each clinic visit. When the reinforcer is linked to plasma viral
load, subjects in the reinforcer arm will be notified within a week of the plasma viral load
result, and of any reinforcement earned. Subjects can elect to come in at any time to receive
the reinforcement, or they can wait until their next monthly appointment and receive the
earnings at that time.
For participants who do not present for laboratory and clinical follow-up within two weeks on
either side of their scheduled quarterly visit, an extensive investigation into the client's
whereabouts through street outreach as well as a search of hospital records for
hospitalization and the provincial vital statistics database for possible deaths will be
prompted. Those who discontinue therapy or who are lost to follow-up at or before 52 weeks
will be considered therapy failures in the analyses.
A final visit 24 weeks after the week 52 visit will be performed. This will involve the same
procedures as the quarterly study visits during the first year, including standard laboratory
tests and urine toxicology, ADE assessments, and CES-D, Addiction Severity Index and HIV Risk
Behavior Scale questionnaires. Participants who fail to present for laboratory and clinical
follow-up within 2 weeks of the expected date of this visit will be sought as described
above.
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