Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Alcohol misuse and related risky sexual behaviors are significant health concerns for college students. Two-thirds of students are current drinkers, at least 1 in 3 report past month heavy episodic drinking (5+ drinks in a row), and 1 in 10 report high intensity drinking (10+ drinks in a row). Increased student alcohol use and heavy drinking are linked to increased sexual activity and related risky behaviors (e.g., unprotected sex, sex with casual partners). This puts students at risk for negative health outcomes (e.g., STIs - sexually transmitted infections) and is also a pathway to sexual victimization and escalated drinking. The first few weeks of college, known as the 'red zone,' provide an opportunity to intervene at time when these behaviors increase. However, most prevention programs for college students tend to focus on student alcohol use and have little to no integration of content on the relationship between alcohol use and risky sexual behaviors. This is an important gap in the literature and a priority area for NIAAA. The research team established the short-term efficacy of a personalized feedback intervention (PFI), a gold standard intervention approach, with integrated content on alcohol and risky sexual behaviors. In this study, we propose to extend our integrated PFI to include a cross-tailored dynamic feedback (CDF) component. The CDF component will use technology to incorporate daily assessments of student behavior and provide students with dynamic weekly feedback over 12 weeks. The goal is to increase the effectiveness of the integrated PFI and to create a program that is easily implemented on college campuses.


Clinical Trial Description

The project utilizes a multisite, hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation study design to (1) evaluate the impact of CDF for first-year college students and (2) identify implementation factors critical to its success to facilitate future scale-up in campus settings. The first aim is to conduct a multi-level stakeholder-engaged adaptation of the integrated alcohol and risky sex PFI through the development and inclusion of CDF. The second aim is to conduct a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of the enhanced intervention (PFI+CDF) in a sample of 600 first-year college students. The primary hypothesis is that participants who receive the PFI+CDF intervention will report less alcohol use, fewer risky sexual behaviors, and fewer consequences relative to those who receive a PFI supplemented with generic health information at follow-up (1, 2, 3, 6, and 13 months). Participants (N=600 total, 300 per site) will be randomized to 1 of 4 groups: (1) PFI+CDF with weekend diary surveys, (2) PFI+GHI with weekend diary surveys, (3) PFI-only, no weekend diary surveys, and (4) assessment-only control, no weekend diary surveys. All participants will complete a baseline survey during the first week of the semester, be randomly assigned to condition, and complete follow-up surveys at 1, 2, 3, 6, and 13 months. This staggered design allows for comparison of the enhanced PFI+CDF relative to the PFI+GHI condition, which may be consistent with a "treatment-as-usual" comparison group (e.g., of the universities that have adopted an evidence-guided alcohol intervention program for their campus, many currently deliver commercialized alcohol-focused PFIs to incoming first-year students). Providing weekly GHI in the comparison condition allows for an equal number of "exposures" between the more intensive conditions (PFI+CDF vs. PFI+GHI), analogous to an attention control group, offering a clearer understanding of the overall impact of the PFI+CDF adaptation. The inclusion of two PFI conditions, one with weekend diary assessments and one without allows us to control for potential assessment reactivity that might result from the diary-style assessment approach. Overall, this design is intended to allow a separation of the "true" intervention effect of the CDF above and beyond the effect of assessment reactivity. The PFI-only vs. assessment-only control group comparison will provide a test of basic efficacy of the integrated PFI that has been adapted based on stakeholder feedback. The third aim seeks to identify factors critical to PFI+CDF implementation in campus settings through conducting focus groups with a subset of students from the RCT and with local and national systems-level stakeholders. The intervention has strong potential for widespread dissemination and targets a group at high risk for alcohol misuse and RSB. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05011903
Study type Interventional
Source University of Kentucky
Contact Anne E Ray, PhD
Phone 8592184944
Email anne.ray@uky.edu
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date August 1, 2024
Completion date January 31, 2027

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT02493647 - Love, Sex & Choices: A Web Series on Mobile Devices to Reduce Black Women's HIV Risk N/A
Completed NCT03533192 - Replication of Evidence-based Programs N/A
Completed NCT02548871 - Evaluation of the Teen Outreach Program in Chicago Public Schools N/A
Completed NCT00220597 - Group Therapies for Reducing HIV-risk Behavior in Women Who Have Survived Childhood Sexual Abuse N/A
Recruiting NCT05620849 - Young Adult Education on Alcohol & Health N/A
Completed NCT04035694 - Evaluation Study of the Online High School Media Aware Program N/A
Completed NCT04070950 - Sexuality of Women With Pelvic Cancer
Completed NCT04079608 - Rigorous Evaluation of High School FLASH N/A
Completed NCT03366636 - Project Legacy Impact Evaluation Study N/A
Completed NCT02613039 - Oral Contraceptive Therapy and Sexuality Phase 4
Completed NCT02736214 - Reproductive Life Plan-based Counseling With Men N/A
Withdrawn NCT01169922 - HIV Prevention With Adolescents: Neurocognitive Deficits and Treatment Response N/A
Completed NCT00249496 - Employment-based Reinforcement to Motivate Drug Abstinence in the Treatment of Drug Addiction. - 1 N/A
Completed NCT02993185 - Making Healthy Decisions: A Trial Evaluating the "Your Move" Teen Pregnancy-prevention Intervention N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01088542 - The Community Youth Development Study: A Test of Communities That Care N/A
Completed NCT03330522 - Reducing HIV Risk in Urban Women: Soap Opera Videos on Video-Capable Cell Phones N/A
Completed NCT02530645 - Development and Testing of a Smartphone Application to Reduce Substance Use and Sexual Risk Among Homeless Young Adults N/A
Completed NCT02866292 - The Pelvic Floor Muscles Strength and Sexual Function in Primigravid and Non-pregnant Nulliparous N/A
Completed NCT00109421 - Friendship Based HIV/STI (Sexually Transmitted Infections) Intervention for African American Females N/A
Recruiting NCT05140980 - Sexuality Education: Knowledge of Women Aged 18 to 25