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Providing PrEP, Hepatitis C Treatment, and MOUD Through Telemedicine at Greensboro SSP

Providing A Resource: Telemedicine at Needle Exchanges to Reach Under-served Populations - Greensboro

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05108935
Acronym
PARTNERUP
Enrollment
17
Registered
2021-11-05
Start date
2022-02-17
Completion date
2023-03-30
Last updated
2023-04-27

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

Conditions

Opioid Use, Opioid Use Disorder, Risk Reduction, Hiv, Hepatitis C

Keywords

opioid, medication for opioid use disorder, Drug user health hub, syringe services program, syringe exchange, PrEP, HIV prevention, retention in care, Suboxone, Hepatitis C treatment, hepatitis C, Opioid use disorder, feasibility, acceptability

Brief summary

The purpose of this study is to provide medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) with buprenorphine and naloxone, or bup/nx, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention, and/or hepatitis C treatment for persons who inject opioids accessing syringe services programs (SSPs), as part of a comprehensive harm reduction program, and assess the acceptability and feasibility of using telemedicine to implement the program. The initial visit will be conducted in person or remotely via telemedicine given COVID-19 protocols at the SSP site in Greensboro, North Carolina (NC); follow-up visits will be conducted via telemedicine.

Detailed description

The purpose of this study is to provide medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) with buprenorphine and naloxone, or bup/nx, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention and/or hepatitis C treatment for persons who inject opioids accessing syringe services programs (SSPs), as part of a comprehensive harm reduction program, and assess the acceptability and feasibility of using telemedicine to implement the program. The study objectives are the following: To assess uptake and persistence to bup/nx, PrEP, and hepatitis C treatment as part of a comprehensive telemedicine-based harm reduction program among people who inject drugs using SSPs. To assess feasibility and acceptability of implementing a telemedicine-based care harm reduction program among program implementers To assess feasibility and acceptability of participating in a telemedicine-based harm reduction program among users The study population is people who inject drugs, specifically opioids, and who access services at an SSP in Greensboro, NC. The study team will enroll 30 people who inject drugs accessing the participating SSP. Participants will be enrolled in the study for 6 months. At the end of the study, they will be referred to MOUD and PrEP providers identified in the community. Data collection Enrollment visit: The study coordinator will administer a baseline survey to collect demographics, HIV risk behaviors, and substance use history. Participants will undergo laboratory testing at the SSP to determine eligibility and enrolled participants will be prescribed bup/nx and PrEP free of charge. Follow up visits: Follow-up visits will be conducted via telemedicine at the SSP. Participants on any combination of treatment including MOUD: For the first month (Month 1), telemedicine visits will be weekly with each to ensure that participants are stable on the appropriate bup/nx dose. Starting at Month 2, the telemedicine visits will take place monthly. For participants on any combination of treatment NOT including MOUD: Participants will attend telemedicine follow up visits at month 3 and month 6 to check in and provide labs. All participants will be asked to complete a questionnaire at Month 3 and Month 6 which include questions on HIV risk and drug use, as well as adherence evaluation. All participants will also be asked to participate in qualitative interviews on their experiences with the program at month 1 and month 6. By the end of the study, we hope to determine the following: 1. The proportion of persons who demonstrate no or minimal opioid use 1a. Defined as completing Month 3 and Month 6 visits with self-reported opioid use on ≤4 days in the past month and/or 2 2. The proportion of persons who remain HIV negative. 2a.Measured via negative HIV test at Month 3 and Month 6 3. Among participants who undergo hepatitis C treatment, the hepatitis C cure rate 4. Retention or persistence in care 4a. Defined as the proportion who remain on treatment (all or any combination of MOUD, PrEP, and hepatitis C treatment) at Month 3 and Month 6 4b. We will also examine whether participants are more apt to remain on paired/combined therapy compared to individual treatment. 5. Organizational facilitators and barriers to establishing a telehealth program in an SSP 5a. We will iteratively collect programmatic data and document challenges and problem-solving that occurs throughout the implementation period of providing bup/nx, PrEP, and/or hepatitis C treatment. We will identify and describe organizational factors using the framework of the Implementation Research Logic Model. 6. Patient perspectives on telehealth delivery of PrEP, MOUD, and/or hepatitis C treatment via SSP 6a. Analysis of interview data at Month 1 and Month 6 to measure attitudes toward PrEP, MOUD, and hepatitis C treatment in general, and on delivery of treatment via telehealth and at the SSP 6b. Analysis of questionnaire data at baseline, Month 3, and Month 6

Interventions

Enrolled participants will be prescribed PrEP Mavyret and/or Suboxone. Follow up visits will be conducted by telemedicine. We are testing whether telemedicine is a feasible method for follow up.

DRUGTruvada

Enrolled participants will be prescribed PrEP Mavyret and/or Suboxone. Follow up visits will be conducted by telemedicine. We are testing whether telemedicine is a feasible method for follow up.

Enrolled participants will be prescribed PrEP Mavyret and/or Suboxone. Follow up visits will be conducted by telemedicine. We are testing whether telemedicine is a feasible method for follow up.

Sponsors

Center for AIDS Research (CFAR)
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
CollaboratorNIH
Duke University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* 18 years or older * Participant in SSP * History of self-report injection opioid use in the past 6 months * Willing to take bup/nx, PrEP, and/or hepatitis C treatment for 6 months * Not currently taking PrEP * HIV negative * Not pregnant * Either a history of sharing injection or drug preparation equipment or risk of sexual acquisition of HIV\* in the past 6 months \*Individuals are considered at risk of sexual acquisition of HIV if they answer yes to any of the items in the below question: In the last 6 months, have any of the following applied to you? * Traded sex for money or drugs * Had a sexual partner who is HIV positive * Did not consistently use condoms when having sex * Had a bacterial sexually transmitted infections (like gonorrhea, chlamydia, or syphilis) * No medical contraindications for these medications such as history of renal failure or bone diseases

Exclusion criteria

* Have altered mental status in which participant cannot sign a consent form * Receive a positive pregnancy test (will be checked at screening visit) * Receive a positive HIV test at enrollment (will be checked at screening visit) * Have evidence of renal failure (will be checked at screening visit) * Have a history of hepatitis B (will be checked at screening visit) * Becoming incarcerated during the study Additional considerations: The following are not

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Proportion who demonstrate no or minimal opioid use.3 monthsDefined as self-reported opioid use on ≤4 days in the past month and/or 2 or more consecutive negative urine tests.
Proportion who remain HIV negative.3 monthsMeasured via negative HIV test.
Among participants who undergo hepatitis C treatment, the hepatitis C cure rate6 monthsMeasured via negative hepatitis C test.
Persistence in care3 monthsDefined as the proportion who remain on treatment.
Ease/difficulty of visiting a SSP to meet with a provider via telemedicinemonth 1Exploratory method, conducted in the form of individual interviews to document the personal experiences of each participant (qualitative method)
Ease/difficulty of accessing the telemedicine video platformmonth 1Exploratory method, conducted in the form of individual interviews to document the personal experiences of each participant (qualitative method)
Acceptability of medical care via a telemedicine video platform6 monthExploratory method, conducted in the form of individual interviews to document the personal experiences of each participant (qualitative method)
Participant satisfaction with the program1 monthExploratory method, conducted in the form of individual interviews to document the personal experiences and opinions of each participant (qualitative method)
Participant perceived usefulness of the programmonth 1Exploratory method, conducted in the form of individual interviews to document the personal experiences and opinions of each participant (qualitative method)
Motivators and barriers affecting program persistencemonth 6Exploratory method, conducted in the form of individual interviews to document the personal experiences and opinions of each participant over time (qualitative method)
Motivators and barriers affecting medication adherence and persistence6 monthsExploratory method, conducted in the form of individual interviews to document the personal experiences and opinions of each participant over time (qualitative method)

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026