HIV Infection, Sexual and Reproductive Health
Conditions
Keywords
HIV prevention, Pre-exposure prophylaxis, Injectable PrEP, Adolescents and young people, South Africa, Cabotegravir long-acting, PrEP Choice
Brief summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to offer adolescents and young people in Cape Town, South Africa different HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) products and describe how they use these products over an 18-month period. The study has both clinical and implementation primary aims. The primary clinical aim is short and long-term persistence on PrEP. Persistence is defined as the length of time that a participant shows continuous use of a PrEP product as intended, without stopping PrEP or switching to another PrEP product. The primary implementation aim involves the determination of factors that either enable or serve as a barrier to PrEP uptake and continuation. Participants will be offered a choice between three antiretroviral-containing PrEP products: (1) a Tenofovir-based oral tablet that needs to be taken daily; (2) a vaginal ring containing Dapivirine that provides HIV protection for up to one month; and (3) an intramuscular injection containing Cabotegravir that provides HIV protection for up to two months. Participants will be able to use the same product throughout the study, switch between products, or stop and restart on PrEP at any point. The study will be offered from two study sites: the first is a mobile clinic that rotates on a fixed schedule across the study area and the second is a fixed-location government primary healthcare clinic. The study will be open to confirmed HIV-negative individuals, including adolescent girls and young women (aged 15-29 years), young gender and sexually diverse populations aged 15-29 years (including men who have sex with men, transgender people, and non-binary people), and their collective sexual partners (including heterosexual, cisgender men) of any age.
Detailed description
The PrEPared to Choose (PtC) study seeks to describe patterns of persistence on HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) products, individually and overall, amongst a cohort of South African adolescents and youth when offered a choice between PrEP products in real-world public health facility and mobile clinic settings. The study will further seek to understand implementation barriers and enablers in PrEP adoption (decision to use any PrEP product), initiation (first dose of any PrEP product), and persistence amongst both PrEP users (adolescents and youth) and PrEP providers (healthcare providers). This study will utilise a prospective cohort design that recruits 1800 adolescents and young people, specifically adolescent girls and young women, including pregnant and lacting women (15-29 years), young male key populations including men who have sex with men and male sex workers (15-29 years), and their collective intimate male partners (any age). Participants will be invited to choose to initiate on one of three types of PrEP (injectable, oral, or vaginal ring PrEP). Participants will be able to use the same product throughout the study, switch between products, or stop and restart on PrEP at any point. Participants will be followed for 7 months to meet the primary outcome of short-term persistence and for a further 18 months to meet the secondary outcome of long-term persistence. Persistence will be defined as the continuous use of the selected product as intended with (a) \<7 day gap and (b) \<28 day gap in PrEP availability for daily dosing (oral PrEP), vaginal ring insertion, or subsequent injection. The 7-day window aligns with previous trial definitions of on-time dosing while the 28-day window aligns with pragmatic definitions of on-time dosing for PrEP in the South African context. The three products available will include: (1) a Tenofovir-based oral tablet that needs to be taken daily and is provided as a 30-day supply of oral tablets; (2) a intra-vaginal silicone ring containing slow-release Dapivirine that provides HIV protection for up to 28 days; and (3) an intramuscular injection containing Cabotegravir that provides HIV protection for up to two months. The study will aim to recruit up to 900 participants that initiate on injectable PrEP, up to 600 participants that initiate on oral PrEP, and up to 300 participants that initiate on vaginal ring PrEP. PrEP choice counselling will be co-created with PrEP providers and young PrEP users (members of an existing PrEP-orientated youth reference group) and delivered by trained, adolescent-friendly HIV counsellors. PrEP will be administered by NIMART trained (Nurse Initiated Management of Anti-Retroviral Therapy) nurses at two clinical sites: a stationary government primary health care facility and a mobile clinic service that rotates on a fixed schedule through the study area. Participants will initiate at a single site but remain eligible to receive subsequent product refills/doses at the other site if desired.
Interventions
3ml intramuscular injection containing 600mg of Cabotegravir
Oral tablet taken daily to PrEP HIV infection.
Intra-vaginal silicone ring containing slow-release Dapivirine, replaced every 28 days
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* All participants must be HIV negative at baseline * All participants must have a body weight ¬\> 35kg at baseline * All participants must be older than 15 years. Specific age criteria will be applied to certain population groups. * All participants must be currently resident in the study area * All participants must be able to provide written, informed voluntary consent to partake in the study and willing and able to receive an injectable pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) product
Exclusion criteria
* Confirmed HIV-positive test result and/or signs and symptoms of an acute HIV infection * Clinical conditions contraindicated for the chosen PrEP product as per SAHPRA regulations, including use of known contraindicated medications. * Allergy to any of the study products * Do not spend a reasonable amount of time in the study area as residents, for school, or work, or are otherwise unable to participate in clinical or study visits for geographical reasons, according to the site investigator * Medical, social or other condition that, in the opinion of the site investigator, would interfere with the conduct of the study or safety of the participant (e.g., provided by self-report, or found upon medical history and examination or in available medical records) * Current enrolment in another HIV prevention clinical trial that in the opinion of the site investigator, would interfere with the conduct of the study or safety of the participant (as verified by registration on the South African Medical Research Council biometric co-enrolment prevention system).
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Primary implementation aim. | 7 months; 18 months | The combination of implementation strategies best achieve pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) adoption, active implementation (initiation), and persistence (sustainment) outcomes over the short term (7 months) and the long term (18 months) will be collected and reported within a RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance) framework. This will include implementation strategies that describe PrEP choice counselling, the integration of injectable PrEP into standard of care clinical practise, and the differentiating practises required for the effective delivery of PrEP from community based and healthcare facility based settings. |
| Short-term persistence | 7 months | Persistence (return for PrEP product within a scheduled visit window) over the short-term (7 months) will be measured and reported as persistent vs non-persistent continuation on each specific PrEP product (oral, injectable, ring) and on PrEP overall (accounting for continuation after switching to a different PrEP product). Non-persistence will be defined as failure to return for PrEP within (a) 7 days of the scheduled visit and (b) 28 days of the scheduled visit. |
Secondary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Time on PrEP | 18 months | Time on PrEP based on expected (e.g. injections given; product collections as logged in dispency records) vs actual (e.g. self-reported patterns of use by the oral and ring PrEP user) PrEP coverage. |
| Safety of PrEP products | 18 months | Reported frequency, timing, and nature of self reported and/or clinically identified adverse events (including clinical events, intimate partner violence, and pregnancy and infant outcomes). |
| Acceptability of PrEP products | 18 months | Descriptive quantitative and qualitative summaries of reasons for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) pause or discontinuation. Qualitative questionnaires and in-depth interviews that include questions on PrEP product and PrEP service acceptability are held every 6 months with a sub-set of PrEP users. |
| HIV testing in a context of PrEP choice | 18 months | Sensitivity and specificity of counsellor-administered 3rd and 4th generation rapid Antigen/Antibody (Ag/Ab) HIV test compared to laboratory-based NAAT (Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests) testing results in injectable pre-exposure prophylaxis-using (Cabotegrvair long-acting initiated) participants as measured at discreet timepoints (baseline, month 1, month 7, and month 18) throughout the study. |
| Tolerability of PrEP products | 18 months | Descriptive reports of product tolerability as per the frequency, timing, and nature of self-reported adverse side effect records. Side effects are asked about by HIV counsellors and research nurses at each study visit and rention officers during retention communications. |
| Durable persistence | 18 months | Persistence (return for PrEP product within a scheduled visit window) over the long-term (18 months) will be measured and reported as persistent vs non-persistent continuation on each specific PrEP product (oral, injectable, ring) and on PrEP overall (accounting for continuation after switching to a different PrEP product). Non-persistence will be defined as failure to return for PrEP within (a) 7 days of the scheduled visit and (b) 28 days of the scheduled visit. |
Other
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| HIV incidence | 18 months | HIV incidence (as determined by HIV rapid and laboratory NAAT tests at each study visit and an overview of the medical records of participants lost to follow up and its correlation with individual PrEP use patterns (including PrEP product choice, PrEP persistence, product switching, and/or PrEP pauses and discontinuation over the 18 month study period). This outcome will be reported, however, the sample size of the study is insufficient to allow for a formal analysis of HIV incidence. |
Countries
South Africa