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Implementing PrEP for Women Who Inject Drugs

Implementation of PrEP for Women Who Inject Drugs Through Practice Facilitation in Primary and Reproductive Health Care

Status
Enrolling by invitation
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05360849
Enrollment
130
Registered
2022-05-04
Start date
2021-06-22
Completion date
2027-03-31
Last updated
2026-03-06

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

Conditions

HIV, Intravenous Substance Abuse, Women's Health, Organization and Administration, Primary Prevention, Implementation Science

Brief summary

Women who inject drugs are among the most vulnerable to acquiring HIV, but very few women who inject drugs are prescribed pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention largely due to barriers within our healthcare system. This research will consider the perspectives of women who inject drugs, healthcare providers, and clinic leadership to improve the way primary care and reproductive health clinics deliver PrEP to women who inject drugs, thereby reducing new HIV infections in this population.

Detailed description

Women who inject drugs (WWID) are among the most vulnerable to acquiring HIV due to the dual effects of both unsafe injecting and sexual practices. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is both effective and recommended to prevent HIV infection among high-risk groups, including women who inject drugs. However, PrEP uptake among WWID is lagging - 92% of people who receive PrEP in New York State are men. This research will consider the perspectives of women who inject drugs, healthcare providers, and clinic leadership to improve the way primary care and reproductive health clinics deliver PrEP to women who inject drugs to prevent women who inject drugs from getting HIV. The investigators plan to support primary care and reproductive health clinics in making organization-level changes to deliver PrEP to women who use drugs with a Practice Facilitation intervention. Practice Facilitation is an evidence-based strategy to support clinics' abilities to implement an intervention such as PrEP through technical assistance, logistical support, and external partnership building. The specific aims of this study are to 1) explore the opinions of women who inject drugs about how PrEP is delivered to them, 2) examine the provider- and organization-level barriers and facilitators to delivering PrEP to WWID, and 3) adapt and pilot test the feasibility and acceptability of Practice Facilitation to improve PrEP delivery to women who inject drugs in primary and reproductive healthcare settings. The objectives of the pilot study are: a) to adapt an evidence-based Practice Facilitation intervention based on WWID's opinions and provider and organization-level challenges reported in Aims 1 & 2; b) to assess potential barriers and facilitators to implementing Practice Facilitation for PrEP delivery, including cost of the intervention; and c) to assess in a pilot study change in uptake of PrEP among WWID following the delivery of Practice Facilitation. The outcomes for this pilot test are feasibility, defined as the extent to which Practice Facilitation of PrEP delivery for WWID can be successfully carried out in primary care and reproductive health clinics, and acceptability, defined as the perception among clinic leaders and providers that Practice Facilitation to improve PrEP delivery among WWID is agreeable or satisfactory. The investigators will also assess the change in PrEP uptake among WWID over the study period and the cost of implementing Practice Facilitation. This pilot will take place over 12 months. Pre-intervention baseline measures will include surveys with clinic leaders and providers on organizational capacity, organizational readiness to change, provider knowledge, experience, and willingness to prescribe PrEP and attitudes about WWID. The number of WWID who receive a PrEP prescription in the past 6 months will be extracted retrospectively from clinic electronic health records and/or clinic quality improvement data at baseline. During the 6-month intervention period, data on the implementation process including the feasibility, acceptability, and cost will be captured using standardized forms completed by the Practice Facilitator. In the 6-month period following the intervention, the investigators will assess the number of WWID who receive a PrEP prescription so that they can examine the outcome of change in uptake of PrEP among WWID. Change in uptake of PrEP among WWID will be assessed as the trend in number of WWID who receive a PrEP prescription over time to establish estimates needed for accurate sample size calculations for a full randomized study. This treatment effect will be assessed using logistic regression comparing the proportion of WWID who are prescribed PrEP over 6-months pre-intervention to the proportion during the 6-month intervention period and 6-months following the intervention using logistic regression. To examine potential biases resulting from clinics that discontinue participation, clinic dropouts will be compared to completers with respect to baseline PrEP prescription measures and other clinic characteristics. As a pilot study, this project will have a small sample size but will produce results that can support evaluation of feasibility and determination of effect size estimates for a subsequent large cluster randomized controlled trial.

Interventions

Participating clinics will work with a Practice Facilitator to modify clinic processes to improve delivery of PrEP to women who inject drugs

Sponsors

University of Pennsylvania
Lead SponsorOTHER
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
CollaboratorNIH

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

To be included in the pilot test of Practice Facilitation, clinics must: * Complete prior leadership and provider surveys * Have 50 or more clinic visits with women who inject drugs in the past year * Have 3 or more clinicians who provide primary and/or reproductive healthcare * Have leadership willing to participate

Exclusion criteria

* None

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Proportion of clinics enrolled that complete the intervention6 monthsThe proportion of clinics who complete the intervention among those that enrolled is measured as part of determining feasibility of Practice Facilitation in primary and reproductive health settings. Feasibility is defined as the extent to which Practice Facilitation of PrEP delivery for WWID can be successfully carried out in primary care and reproductive health clinics.
Number of intervention sessions completed by site champions6 monthsThe number of Practice facilitation sessions that the site champion completes with the Practice Facilitator is measured as part of determining feasibility of Practice Facilitation in primary and reproductive health clinics. Feasibility is defined as the extent to which Practice Facilitation of PrEP delivery for WWID can be successfully carried out in primary care and reproductive health clinics.
Proportion of providers who engage in Practice Facilitation training sessions6 monthsThe proportion of providers at an enrolled clinic who attend Practice Facilitation training sessions is measured as part of determining feasibility of Practice Facilitation. Feasibility is defined as the extent to which Practice Facilitation of PrEP delivery for WWID can be successfully carried out in primary care and reproductive health clinics.
Proportion of providers who screen women who inject drugs for PrEP eligibility6 monthsThe proportion of providers in enrolled clinics who screen their patients who identify as women who inject drugs for PrEP eligibility is measured as part of determining the acceptability of Practice Facilitation for PrEP among women who inject drugs. Acceptability is defined as the perception among clinic leaders and providers that Practice Facilitation to improve PrEP delivery among WWID is agreeable or satisfactory.
Proportion of providers who write a PrEP prescription to women who inject drugs6 monthsThe proportion of providers in enrolled clinics who prescribe PrEP to patients who identify as women who inject drugs is measured as part of determining the acceptability of Practice Facilitation for PrEP among women who inject drugs. Acceptability is defined as the perception among clinic leaders and providers that Practice Facilitation to improve PrEP delivery among WWID is agreeable or satisfactory.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change in PrEP uptake among WWID18 monthsChange in uptake of PrEP among WWID will be assessed as the difference in number of WWID who receive a PrEP prescription during the 6 months prior to baseline compared to the 6 months post-intervention.
Incremental implementation cost6 monthsIncremental implementation cost is the cost of adding Practice Facilitation for PrEP uptake from the healthcare sector perspective.

Countries

United States

Contacts

PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATORLaura Starbird, PhD

University of Pennsylvania

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 7, 2026