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HIV Clinic-Based Intervention to Improve ART Adherence and Prevent HIV Transmission

HIV Clinic-Based Intervention to Improve ART Adherence and Prevent HIV Transmission

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02044484
Acronym
APTcare
Enrollment
2794
Registered
2014-01-24
Start date
2014-01-31
Completion date
2016-10-31
Last updated
2025-03-20

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

HIV

Keywords

HIV, AIDS, Viral load, Primary care

Brief summary

This research, co-sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institute of Mental health, is conducted at six HIV clinics in the U.S. The research examines the effect of a clinic-based multi-component intervention delivered to HIV patients when they attend clinic for primary care. The study tests the hypothesis that the intervention will improve the viral load status of patients and improve attendance for HIV primary care.

Detailed description

This study examines the effect of an HIV clinic-based multi-component intervention on HIV patients' subsequent viral load status and attendance for HIV primary care. The intervention has clinic-wide and targeted components. The clinic-wide components are given to all HIV patients when they attend clinic for primary care and include: (1) patient behavioral screening used by providers in the clinical care of patients and (2) dissemination of palm cards which contain messages about the importance of adhering to antiretroviral therapy (ART), coming to clinic regularly, and safer sex. The targeted components focus on patients whose viral loads exceed 1000 copies/mL. Targeted components include: (1) an interactive computer-based intervention (CBI) completed twice (separated by 2-4 months) by patients at the clinic and (2) referral for one-on-one counseling from trained project Health Coaches if the patient's viral load does not show a 1-log reduction after the first CBI or remains above 200 copies/mL after two administrations of the CBI. Patients are not individually randomly assigned to arms. The multi-component intervention is evaluated using a group-randomized design. Clinics were randomized to either Panel A or Panel B with the intent of equating the two panels on the percentage of patients with suppressed viral load prior to implementing the intervention. Three clinics (Panel A) begin intervention activities, and the other three clinics (Panel B) delay onset of all intervention activities for 16 months and thus serve as a concurrent control group during that 16-month period. This enables between-panel comparisons of the outcomes during this time interval. The primary analytic cohort for the group-randomized analysis will be all patients in Panel A and Panel B whose viral load exceeds 1000 copies/mL who have a scheduled primary care appointment during a 7-month enrollment period. Viral load eligible patients in Panel A will be part of the analytic cohort regardless of whether they enroll in the CBI or not. These viral load eligible patients represent the group of patients who are targeted for the main intervention components (CBI and counseling) and, accordingly, will comprise the denominator (estimated to be 2,794) for the primary analysis of the viral load and clinic attendance outcomes. Each cohort member in Panel A is followed for 9 months for purpose of delivering the intervention and assessing the outcomes. Each cohort member in Panel B is followed for 9 months for purpose of assessing the outcomes. Two secondary levels of analysis will also be performed. First, analysis will be performed focusing on all patients in Panel A clinics who have a viral load over 1000 copies/mL and received at least one administration of the CBI (as-treated approach). Outcomes of these patients will be compared to patients in Panel B whose viral load exceeds 1000 copies/mL during the recruitment period. Second, an analysis will be performed at the clinic-wide level including all patients in Panel A clinics regardless of viral load level who are scheduled for primary care during the recruitment period. Outcomes of these patients will be compared to all patients in Panel B scheduled for primary care visits during the recruitment period.

Interventions

The computer-based intervention (CBI) is offered to patients whose viral load exceeds 1000 copies/mL at enrollment. Counseling is offered to patients whose viral load does not drop 1-log after the first CBI or remains above 200 copies/mL after completing two CBIs. The behavioral screener will be conducted of all patients at primary care visits. The patient completes the screener before seeing the provider. Responses are given to their provider who can use it in clinical care of the patient. At primary care visits, all patients are given a palm card containing 1 of 15 empowering messages before they leave the clinic. Messages cover three domains: adhering to antiretroviral therapy, regular care, and safer sex.

Sponsors

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Lead SponsorFED

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* All patients are eligible to receive behavioral screening and palm cards * Patients with viral load exceeding 1000 copies/mL are eligible for the computer-based intervention and referral to counseling

Exclusion criteria

* Patients under the age of 18 (under 19 in Alabama) are not eligible for the computer-based intervention or referral to counseling because they cannot provide legal informed consent.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Percentage of patients without a gap in HIV primary care (without a gap > 6 months)From baseline to 9-month time point
Percentage of patients with suppressed HIV (≤ 200 copies/mL)At 9-month time point

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change across time in log10 viral load valuesFrom baseline to 9-month time point
HIV primary care appointment adherenceFrom baseline to 9-month time pointProportion of scheduled HIV primary care appointments kept (omitting prior cancellations) per patient

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 25, 2026