HIV Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effective Aids Treatment and Support in the Free State (FEATS): Adherence and Nutritional Support for Effective and Sustainable Antiretroviral Treatment in Resource Constrained Settings
The aim of this study is to investigate the benefits of ARV treatment to patients, to the
family members of patients on ARV treatment, and to communities at large. The study also
aims to investigate the impact of a peer adherence support and a nutritional intervention on
measures of treatment success. To this end, 648 patients who had commenced ARV treatment in
the past month at twelve selected health care facilities will be recruited into the study.
In addition, 204 randomly sampled households from the communities served by the twelve
selected clinics will be recruited into the study. Trained enumerators will at baseline
conduct semi-structured interviews with patients and households. Following the baseline
survey, patients recruited into the study will be randomly assigned to one of three groups:
- Patients receiving ARV treatment and the associated support currently provided in the
public sector ARV treatment programme.
- Patients receiving (a) plus bi-weekly visits by an experienced ARV patient who has been
trained as a peer adherence supporter
- Patients receiving (a) and (b) plus a weekly nutritional supplement in the form of two
400g cans of meatballs and spaghetti in tomato sauce The group of 'comparison'
households comprises the fourth group. Trained enumerators will conduct follow-up
interviews with all patients and households at approximately six- and at twelve-months
respectively. In addition, the ARV coordinator and other providers working in the ARV
treatment programme at each of the twelve selected health care facilities will be
interviewed by trained enumerators, at baseline and again at six- and at twelve-months.
Clinical data will be obtained from patient files at baseline and at completion of the
study. Using these data, various outcomes of importance to the study will be compared
between the four study groups, using experimental and non-experimental methods.
The study has three main objectives, each with a set of more specific aims:
Objective 1: Present a broader view of treatment success
In order to achieve this objective, the study aims to:
- Investigate how access to antiretroviral treatment and to nutritional supplementation
impacts labour productivity and time allocation of patients and other household members
- Investigate how access to antiretroviral treatment and to nutritional supplementation
impacts household welfare
- Investigate how access to antiretroviral treatment and to nutritional supplementation
impacts educational and health outcomes for children in households with patients on
antiretroviral treatment
Objective 2: Develop a model of the determinants of treatment success
In order to achieve this objective, the study aims to:
- Determine how various individual, household and facility-level characteristics impact
adherence to antiretroviral treatment, including access to a disability grant
- Determine how access to a peer adherence supporter and nutritional supplementation
impacts adherence to antiretroviral treatment
- Estimate the cost-effectiveness of these interventions in enhancement in adherence,
from both a fiscal and a social perspective
Objective 3: Understand the links between treatment and prevention
In order to achieve this objective, the study aims to:
- Determine how access to antiretroviral treatment impacts on the uptake of voluntary
counselling and testing among members of households including patients on ARV treatment
and among members of households in the general community
- Determine how access to antiretroviral treatment, to a peer adherence supporter and to
nutritional supplementation impacts on the sexual behaviour of patients on
antiretroviral treatment, their household members, and members of households in the
general community
The study aims to investigate effective AIDS treatment and support in settings where free
ARV treatment has been introduced already, with issues of scale-up and sustainability as a
result representing an important issue. The study therefore is being conducted in twelve
phase I ARV assessment sites in the Free State province, i.e. sites where ARV treatment
first became available when the ARV treatment programme was launched in the Free State
province in 2004/05.
1. Type of study The study is a prospective, cohort study with a patient, household,
facility and provider survey component. The study has a social scientific focus, with a
clinical component, and comprises two behavioural interventions.
2. Description of experimental design The study is a combination of a group time-series
quasi-experimental design and a a variation of a double randomised consent design. The
study comprises four groups of households, three of which include patients on ARV
treatment (Figure 1). The provision of ARV treatment represents a quasi- or field
experiment, while the peer adherence support and nutritional interventions represent a
randomised-control experiment executed in accordance with a Zelen-type double
randomised consent design. This study design is deemed appropriate given the fact that:
blinding is not practicable or possible; the use of classical randomisation and
informed consent procedures significantly threatens internal validity; the
interventions are highly attractive; the control group receives standard care; the
study focuses on a clinically relevant objective(s) and offers important new insights
(Kaptchuk, 2001; MacLehose et al, 2001; Rains & Penzien, 2005).
Figure 1: Experimental study design
Group A: Households including ARV patients who receive the ARV treatment and associated
support provided as part of government's ARV treatment programme Sample size: n~216]
Group B: Households including ARV patients who receive the ARV treatment and associated
support provided as part of government's ARV treatment programme PLUS Adherence support
provided by a trained peer adherence supporter during twice weekly visits to the
patient [Sample size: n~216]
Group C: Households including ARV patients who receive the ARV treatment and associated
support provided as part of government's ARV treatment programme PLUS Adherence support
provided by a trained peer adherence supporter during twice weekly visits to the
patient PLUS Nutritional supplementation: weekly delivery of two 400g cans of meatballs
and spaghetti in tomato sauce by peer adherence supporter [Sample size: n~216]
Group D: Randomly selected households from the general community served by the selected
health facility, excluding households where someone is known to receive ARV treatment
[Sample size: n~180]
Sample size estimation:
The sample size calculation for the arms of the study is based on the method proposed
by Freedman (1982). The sample size estimation is based on the following assumptions:
- The proportion of people showing an improvement in a specific outcome, are
compared across two arms of the study at a time.
- Attrition in the control group of comparison households is assumed to be minimal
or none (since there is no ARV patient in the household), while attrition in the
intervention arms (where ARV treatment is considered an intervention) is assumed
to be much higher, given a reported mortality of 10% among ARV patients in the
first months of treatment (Free State Department of Health, 2006).
- The required sample sizes for a 4-equal-arms-at-end-of-study design were
calculated taking into account the attrition rate of 17% in the three intervention
groups and a ratio of 1 for the treatment: control arms at the end of the study is
expected.
- Assuming a two-tailed test with Type I error of 5%, Type II error of 10%, and at
least 17% improvement in any outcome.
The affordable sample size was 801 households with 177 for the control arm and 208 for
each of the intervention arms. This sample is expected to yield statistically
significant results for the analysis of all measures contemplated. Although the
statistical power of the study design with this sample size can be considered good the
sample size was rounded up to ~828 households, with ~180 households in the control arm
and ~216 households in each of the intervention arms. This was done to represent
multiples of 12 since the study will be conducted in 12 facilities.
3. Method of randomisation From among the ~648 ARV patients recruited into the study
[~54/study site], individual patients will be assigned randomly to the control group
[Group A; n~216] and to the two experimental arms of the study [Group B & C; n~216
each], using the relevant random sampling selection commands in version 10 of the Stata
software programme.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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