Treatment Adherence Clinical Trial
Official title:
Adapting an Effective Intervention for Enhancing Engagement in HIV Care to Meet the Needs of Key Populations in India
This study seeks to adapt and pilot test a comprehensive wellness program to address the barriers to engagement in the HIV care continuum among men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women (TGW) in India. The content involves an adaptation of the earlier Chetana wellness adherence intervention which was found to successfully improve adherence and viral suppression among mainstream Indian persons living with HIV (PLWH). Based on the initial formative work, the adaptation includes added wellness group content and will be offered in a flexible format. It also uses peer navigators (PN), rather than Master-level counselors, to deliver tailored support at mutually convenient times and places. This PN model has been used successfully by Indian collaborators and in previous research in South Africa to link and retain PLWH in care. The intervention is intended to break the link between stigma and care seeking, which is especially important for key populations (KPs), who must deal with historically hostile legal environments and substantial isolation that further reduces engagement in HIV preventive practices and services . Investigators are conducting this research to address the following aims: 1) To engage community stakeholders in the adaptation and pilot testing of the Chetana-PN wellness adherence intervention for use with Indian MSM and TGW who are living with HIV and who are newly or insufficiently engaged in care. 2a) To assess in a small randomized control trial (RCT) the acceptability and feasibility of the theoretically-guided, adapted intervention and to obtain preliminary effect size estimations for the impact of the intervention on engagement in care, among MSM and TGW. 2b) To characterize participant and navigator experiences in the Chetana-PN intervention and describe the practices that were most successful at overcoming barriers to care with 25 participants who received the Chetana-PN intervention and the peer navigators. These findings will subsequently be used to inform a future RCT designed to establish the efficacy of this adapted Chetana-PN intervention for sexual minorities in India.
The "Chetana-PN" study aims to improve engagement in care among two key populations living with HIV -MSM and TGW in the Indian state of Maharashtra, which has both India's highest HIV prevalence and LGBT population. Aim 1: To engage community stakeholders in the adaptation of the Chetana-PN wellness adherence intervention for use with Indian MSM and TGW who are living with HIV. Building on the original Chetana intervention and using the steps described in the adaptation framework12, investigators will add population-specific content and a peer navigator component to provide tailored support. To ensure the content fully meets MSM and TGW needs, investigators will then conduct a stakeholder workshop and incorporate their recommendations. Workshop input will be used to finalize a project manual of operations, which will be presented to stakeholders for review. Subsequently, study procedures and adapted content will be piloted with 10 participants and gather feedback to determine if additional modifications are needed to finalize. Aim 2A: To assess in a RCT the acceptability and feasibility of the theoretically-guided, adapted intervention and obtain preliminary effect size estimations for the impact of the intervention on (1) appointment keeping, (2) ART adherence, and (3) viral suppression among MSM and TGW who are newly or insufficiently engaged in HIV care. 110 MSM and TGW living with HIV and sub-optimally engaged in care will be randomized to an acceptability and feasibility trial of the adapted Chetana-PN intervention versus a wellness attention control arm. Both groups will receive standard ART center medical treatment and counseling. Data will be collected over 12 months using interviewer-administered questionnaires, ART center booklets and viral load. Data will be analyzed to preliminarily examine whether the intervention impacts model drivers of care-seeking behaviors. These include depression, stigma, disclosure, and barriers to care. Aim 2B: To characterize participant and navigator experiences in the Chetana-PN intervention and describe the practices that were most successful at overcoming barriers to care. 25 intervention participants and three navigators will be interviewed at the end of their involvement in the intervention to identify practices and other intervention components that were more and less successful at keeping the participants engaged in care and adherent to their ART regimens. The data will also shed additional light on the acceptability and feasibility of the intervention. Data will contextualize the findings from the pilot trial and inform a future RCT designed to establish the efficacy of Chetana-PN intervention for sexual minorities in India. The proposed intervention adaptation builds upon the original Chetana intervention, tailoring content, enhancing flexibility, and adding a peer navigation component based on work conducted by the study team in India and other settings. The intervention involves wellness sessions with KP specific content and flexibility and peer navigation. The Control arm will receive general wellness sessions without any content focusing on engagement in care. Given the challenges of MSM and TGW to attend groups with fixed schedules, the Chetana-PN groups will be offered on a drop-in basis and scheduled at multiple times. Participants assigned to the intervention arm will be assigned to a peer navigator who will be their principal point of contact for the intervention. The navigator will work with a participant to identify their unique barriers that currently affect engagement in care and train participants to identify and break down solutions into manageable steps. Special attention will be paid to barriers associated with intersectional stigma and PNs will draw on their own experiences as members of stigmatized groups in identifying and brainstorming successful coping strategies. While this is not a structural intervention, PNs will work with their clients to develop ways of coping with structural barriers, including transportation and referrals to social services. Participants will be interviewed by trained study staff in a private space. Questionnaires and reviews of ART clinic booklets assessing outcome and model variables measured by our group in prior studies will be performed at BL, 6, 9 and 12 months. Responses will be entered into a tablet-based version of REDCap mobile app. REDCap is a tool used to capture and store data in a secure way. The interviews will be conducted by experienced staff members who are fluent in Hindi, Marathi and English and who will undergo training that includes interviewing techniques, standard operating procedures, human subjects protections and the study protocol. Viral load testing will be conducted by the study at baseline and by the ART center at follow-up visits, using the same lab. 25 intervention participants (15 MSM and 10 TGW) and the navigators will be enrolled into qualitative interviews to discuss their experiences with the intervention. To ensure intervention experiences can be recalled accurately, enrollment of intervention participants for interviews will be on a rolling basis, with each selected participant being interviewed within one month of intervention completion. Navigators will be eligible for interviews after completing delivery of services to all assigned participants. The following criteria will be used to determine if the intervention is sufficiently acceptable and feasible for an RCT: 1) Ability to recruit an average of 7 participants/week (in order to ensure enrollment of n=500 over 18 months in a future RCT); 2) Retention of at least 80% of participants with complete data; 3) All intervention participants will attend at least one monthly PN meeting or video chat and one drop-in group per month. ;
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