Hiv Clinical Trial
Official title:
Mhealth for Pre-exposure Prophylaxis Adherence by Young Adult MSM
The proposed project involves the development and testing of an mhealth intervention to increase adherence to PrEP treatment using texts providing tailored pill reminders, motivational messages, and health education messages. The intervention targets culturally-diverse young adult men who have sex with men (YMSM), who are at high risk for both HIV and non-adherence to PrEP medication. Supporting PrEP adherence would help reduce new HIV infections in this group.
Specific Aims: Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) treatment greatly reduces HIV risk. When the
PrEP pill (Truvada) is taken daily, it can reduce HIV risk up to 92%. NIH has designated
reducing HIV/AIDS as a high-priority topic for research support using AIDS-designated funds.
Among other groups, the CDC recommends PrEP for men who have sex with men (MSM) who are
HIV-negative and in a relationship with an HIV+ partner, and MSM who have had anal sex
without a condom or have been diagnosed with an STD in the past 6 months; about 1 in 4 MSM
meet these criteria. Young people, age 13-29, accounted for 27% of new HIV cases in 2009. The
highest concentration of new cases was among 20-29-year olds; 70% of these were MSM.
Disparities are pronounced: 57% of new HIV cases reported in 2008-2010 were among African
American MSM; 21% of cases were young Latino MSM. In PrEP trials to date, adherence has been
generally low. Across these trials, younger age was the most consistent factor associated
with lower PrEP adherence. Medication adherence can be difficult for young people. While
young adults better comprehend benefits of prevention than teens, decision-making maturity is
still developing through the 20s. It is not until the late 20s that two brain systems, one
that spurs sensation-seeking and one that undergirds self-regulation and planning ahead,
become integrated. Males may lag behind females in this regard. Furthermore, this
developmental process can be hampered for those who have experienced the stress of
victimization as have many MSM. PrEP adherence interventions for young adult MSM (YMSM) must
take into account developmental factors that can affect decision-making. CDC strongly
encourages PrEP prescribers to offer adherence support; foundational to that support is
patient education. CDC also suggests adherence plans: 1) individually tailor dosing time 2)
use pill reminders 3) use supports to address changes in routine and 4) consider disclosure
issues, i.e. help patients identify social network members who can support adherence or ways
to overcome adherence barriers due to lack of social disclosure. To date, no PrEP adherence
intervention has been developed specifically for YMSM, despite increasing HIV rates in this
group and their increased risk for non-adherence. High rates of texting by young adults,
coupled with strong evidence base that text reminders can improve adherence, point to mobile
health (mhealth) as an ideal way to support PrEP adherence among YMSM.
The goal of the proposed SBIR is to develop and test the feasibility and short-term
effectiveness of an individually-tailored, developmentally- and culturally-sensitive mhealth
PrEP adherence intervention for culturally-diverse YMSM. Its scientific premise rests on
three large well-conducted adherence follow-up studies to PrEP efficacy trials, i.e. VOICE,
FEM-PrEP, and iPrEx, which identified adherence facilitators/barriers being targeted in the
proposed study, and on meta-analyses of a large and growing literature pointing to the
effectiveness of mhealth for medication adherence across chronic conditions, including HIV.
The intervention will be modeled on Dr Patricia Weitzman's (proposed PI) SBIR Phase 1 and 2
mhealth anti-retroviral therapy (ART) adherence intervention for HIV+ African Americans. That
intervention employed a three-pronged approach of tailored pill reminders with age- and
culturally-sensitive motivational and educational texts. Texts were designed to increase ART
self-efficacy, and based on principles from social learning theory and positive psychology.
Using a similar approach, formative research will be conducted to create motivational and
educational texts that are culturally- and developmentally-sensitive for diverse YMSM.
Moreover, formative research will allow us to identify and target unique PrEP adherence
barriers and facilitators among culturally-diverse YMSM. Findings will be used to create and
pilot a 6-week randomized mhealth PrEP adherence intervention addressing adherence barriers
and facilitators identified in PrEP RCTs, and our formative research, as well as CDC PrEP
adherence recommendations. Our long-term goal is to reduce HIV infection rates among
culturally-diverse YMSM by supporting PrEP adherence.
Specific Aim 1: Develop a individually-tailored, culturally- and developmentally-sensitive
mhealth intervention to promote adherence to PrEP among YMSM, ages 20-29. Aim 2: Implement
6-week pilot randomized controlled trial to evaluate short-term effectiveness (did it improve
PrEP adherence, PrEP knowledge and PrEP treatment self- efficacy). CONSORT guidelines for the
RCT will be followed in order to ensure scientific rigor. Primary Hypothesis: Young adult MSM
who receive tailored daily pill reminder plus motivational/ educational texts for 6 weeks
will show greater PrEP adherence compared to controls. Secondary Hypothesis: Young adult MSM
who receive tailored daily pill reminder plus motivational/educational texts for 6 weeks will
show greater PrEP knowledge and PrEP treatment self-efficacy compared to controls. Aim 3:
Evaluate feasibility of the intervention, e.g. implementation fidelity (to what extent was
intervention delivered as planned), program appeal (how well did participants like the
intervention) and program reach (how well did it reach participants). CDC estimates PrEP is
appropriate for the roughly 500,000 MSM in the US. Impact models show even modest adherence
to PrEP could reduce new HIV infections among MSM by 29% over 20 years. An mhealth PrEP
adherence tool targeting young adult MSM, a group experiencing increased HIV incidence, could
not only support that reduction but—due to easy access and low cost—actually improve upon it.
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