| Category 1: Clinical trials among HIV-infected people with past or current unhealthy alcohol use |
| Velasquez et al. 2009 | Population : 253 HIV-infected men who had sex with men (MSM) in the previous 3 months and an AUDIT score of more than 8.Setting: Recruited from HIV organizations, advertising, and social venues between 1999 and 2003. | Intervention: Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) of four sessions of motivational interviewing (MI)-based individual counseling and four sessions of transtheoretical model–based peer-group education/support.Control: HIV and alcohol educational materials, resource referrals, and advice to stop or reduce drinking.Assessment: Baseline, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months. | Alcohol use: Control group had 1.38 times the number of drinks per 30 days and 1.50 times the number of heavy drinking days per 30 days compared with the intervention group.Sex risk: No significant effect was demonstrated for anal sex without a condom or number of days on which drinking and sex occurred. | Alcohol measures: AUDIT, 90-day timeline follow-back (TLFB) at follow-up assessments.Differential loss to follow-up at 12 months (34% in intervention group and 26% in control group). Only 95 of 118 (81%) of the intervention group and 121 of 135 (90%) of the control group were included in the analyses. |
| Aharonovich et al. 2006 | Population : 31 HIV-infected men and women engaged in HIV primary care.Alcohol use: All had four or more drinks at least once in the past 30 days, 55% had five or more drinks in the last week.Setting : HIV primary care clinic. | Intervention: 30-minute MI session on reducing alcohol use by counselor trained in MI plus an automated daily telephone self-monitoring interactive voice response (IVR) system with graphical feedback at 30-day follow-up meetings.Control: No control group.Assessment: Baseline, 30, 60, and 90 days. | Drinks per day: Using 7-day recall, mean drinks per day was 3.2 at baseline, 1.7 at 30 days, and 1.2 at 60 days. Mean highest drinks per day was 8.4, 4.1, and 3.8, respectively.Cocaine use: Decreased significantly at 60 days. | Alcohol measures: Quantity and frequency in past week and past month.Qualitative assessment of the program demonstrated satisfaction with daily calling and the feedback graph.Not a randomized controlled trial. |
| Parsons et al. 2007 | Population : 143 HIV-infected subjects on antiretroviral therapy (ART) with hazardous drinking (more than 16 drinks per week for men, more than 12 drinks per week for women) recruited through HIV clinics and advertising from 2002 to 2005.Setting : Behavioral research center. | Intervention : RCT of eight 60-minute MI plus cognitive behavioral skills training (CBST) session by Masters-level counselors.Control : Eight 60-minute time and content-equivalent education sessions by health educators.All sessions delivered individually in private office over 12 weeks.Assessment: Baseline, 3 and 6 months. | Alcohol use: No significant effects on total drinks over 14 days or drinks per drinking day. Decreases in both groups from baseline to 3 and 6 months for these two drinking outcomes.Medication adherence : Significant improvement in dose and day adherence at 3 months, but difference not retained at 6 months.HIV viral load/CD4 cell count: Significant improvement at 3 months but not at 6 months. | Alcohol measure : Self-report 14-day TLFB to calculate total drinks and drinks per drinking day.Adherence measures: Self-report dose adherence = number of doses taken/number of doses scheduled over 14 days. Self-report dayadherence = number of days with perfect adherence/14 days. |
| Samet et al. 2005 | Population : 151 HIV-infected patients on ART, with current or lifetime alcohol problems, determined by two or more positive responses on CAGE questionnaire or clinical diagnosis of alcohol disorder recruited from 1997 to 2000.Setting: Hospital (patients receiving HIV medical care). | Intervention: RCT of four 15-to 60-minute sessions over 3 months with MI-trained nurse who (1) addressed alcohol problems, (2) educated about ART efficacy, and (3) delivered tailored adherence advice including a reminder watch and a home visit.Control: Standard careAssessment: Baseline, 6, and 12 months. | Alcohol use: No significant effects on drinks per day, percent reporting any drinking, percent reporting hazardous drinking.Medication adherence: No significant effects on 3-day or 30-day adherence.HIV viral load/ CD4 cell count: No significant effects on mean CD4 cell count or mean log HIV RNA. | Alcohol measures: Self-report 30-day alcohol use from the Addiction Severity Index.Adherence measures: Self-reported AIDS Clinical Trial Group scale with 100% and 95% or more thresholds at 3-day and 30-day adherence, respectively. |
| Category 2: Clinical trials among HIV-infected people of whom at least 10% have current alcohol use |
| Rotheram-Borus et al. 2009 | Population : 270 HIV-infected people sexually active without a condom with at least one HIV-negative partner or two HIV-infected partners who were marginally housed and had four or more assessments; recruited from 2000 to 2002.Alcohol use: Mean number of days using alcohol or marijuana in the last 90 was 37.Setting : Recruited from community agencies, medical clinics, and advertisements. | Intervention: RCT of 15 90-minute individual counseling sessions, organized in three modules (“Coping” at 0–5 months, “Act Safe” at 5–10 months, and “Stay Healthy” at 10–15 months).Control: No intervention, only assessmentsAssessment: Baseline, 15, 20, and 25 months. | Alcohol or marijuana use in the last 3 months : At 25 months, the intervention group reduced its use from 36 to 28 days in the prior 90 days, whereas the control group was unchanged at 35 days of the last 90.Number of HIV negative partners and risky sexual acts also was reduced. | Subanalysis of a clinical trial (Wong et al. 2008): 5% used alcohol/marijuana in the parent study. Proportion of alcohol users at baseline not presented in this study.Parent study reported only transmission act outcomes and demonstrated an effect that was not maintained at 25 months.Imbalance in transmission risk acts at baseline resulted in ineffective randomization, thus propensity scores were used to adjust for imbalances. |
| Naar-King et al. 2006, 2008 | Population: 65 HIV-infected patients, aged 16–25 regardless of alcohol use or risk behaviors.Alcohol use: 77% lifetime, 39% had used alcohol in last 30 days at study entry.Setting: Adolescent HIV care clinic within a tertiary care children’s hospital. | Intervention: RCT of four 60-minute sessions of motivational enhancement. Therapy focused on two of three areas: substance use, sexual risk, or medication adherence over 10 weeks.Control: Wait list and standard care.Assessment: Baseline, 3, 6, and 9 months. | No significant effects at 9-month follow-up.Alcohol use: Borderline significant reduction in number of drinks in the week containing the maximum number of drinks (−9.65 vs. −1.3) at 3 months (n = 51).Marijuana use: Borderline significant reduction in number of times marijuana was used (n = 65).Sexual risk: Borderline significant reduction in total number of intercourse acts without a condom at 6 months (n = 65).HIV viral load: Significant reduction in log viral load at 6 months (n = 65). | Alcohol and drug measures : Timeline follow-back, though time window is not stated.Sex risk measure : Total number of unprotected intercourse acts without a condom.Note: 3-month outcomes on 51 subjects were published in 2006 and 6- and 9-month outcomes on 65 subjects published in 2008. |
| Gilbert et al. 2008 | Population: 476 patients with alcohol risk (38%), defined as exceeding NIAAA safe drinking limits or drug risk (42%), or sex risk (60%), were recruited between 2003 and 2006.Setting : Outpatient HIV clinics. | Intervention : RCT of two sessions of tailored risk-reduction counseling at study entry and 3 months using a MI “Video Doctor” via laptop computer, printed educational worksheet, and delivery of a cueing sheet on reported risks to clinic care providers.Control: Standard care.Assessment : Baseline, 3, and 6 months. | Alcohol use: No significant effects on any risky drinking or number of drinks per week.Drug use: Significantly decreased 30-day illicit drug use at 3 and 6 months and fewer days of illicit drug use at 6 months.Sex risk: Significantly decreased 3-month unprotected sex at 3 and 6 months and fewer casual sex partners at 6 months. No effects on condom use. | Alcohol measures: Self-reported NIAAA risky drinking over 3 months.Drug use measures : Self-reported drug use over 30 days included any cocaine, methamphetamine, or heroin or 3 or more days of barbiturates, prescription opiates, hallucinogens, inhalants, or methylene-dioxymethamphetamine (MDMA). |
| Sorensen et al. 2003 | Population : 190 HIV-infected patients with substance dependence; recruited from inpatient medical wards, detoxification clinic, and the emergency department from 1994 to 1996.Alcohol use: 61% in the last 30 days.Setting: Public general hospital. | Intervention : RCT of 12 months of case management by certified substance counselors in the community with caseload of 1:20Control: Single brief contact with education about reducing HIV risk, information on HIV services, referrals to addiction treatment, social services.Assessment: Baseline, 6, 12, and 18 months. | No outcomes showed significant change between study groups at any time points, except decreased sex risk index.Outcomes measured: Addiction severity index composite scores, AIDS risk assessment scores, Beck depression inventory, health status questionnaire, and support evaluation list. | Summary/index score is shown without explanation of the raw measure. |
| Rotheram-Borus et al. 2001 | Population: 310 HIV-infected patients (age 13–24) from nine adolescent clinics recruited from 1994 to 1996.Alcohol use: 67% nonabstinent at baseline.Setting: Adolescent clinics. | Intervention : 23 group sessions of two modules (“Stay Healthy” and “Act Safe”).Control: Standard care. Eligible for receiving the intervention at the conclusion of the study.Assessment: Baseline, 9, and 15 months. | Alcohol/marijuana use: 63% for attendees vs. 67% for control vs. 84% for nonattendees at 15 months. | Sequential assignment of 15 youths to intervention versus control groups (not randomized).The reported comparisons were attendees versus non-attendees versus control subjects. No intention-to-treat analysis was reported.Differential loss to follow-up. No alcohol-specific outcome was reported. |
| Category 3: Randomized controlled trials among alcohol users at high risk for HIV infection |
| Morgenstern et al. 2007 | Population: 198 MSM with current alcohol user disorder.Alcohol use: 88% with alcohol dependence. Mean drinks per drinking day was 10.4.Setting : Subjects recruited through advertisements in gay media, internet chat rooms, outreach to gay bars and clubs. | Intervention: 12 sessions of combined MI and coping skills training (MI+CBT) over 12 weeks (n = 47).Control: Four sessions of MI over 12 weeks (n = 42). Non–help-seeking (NHS) control group (n = 109).Assessment: Baseline, 12 weeks, and 12 months. | Drinks per day: At 12 weeks, the MI group had greater decreases in drinks per day than the MI+CBT group. This difference was not sustained at 12 months. Both intervention groups had greater decreases then the NHS group, but the NHS group also had substantial decreases in drinking. | Alcohol measures: CIDI at baseline. TLFB and short inventory of problems at followup.Potential subjects with drug use more severe than alcohol use disorder were excluded. Less than 10% HIV infected.Subjects lost to follow-up not included in the analysis. |
| Kalichman et al. 2008 | Population : 342 men and women who drink in South African shebeens.Setting: Informal alcohol establishments (shebeens). | Intervention: 3-hour skills-based HIV–alcohol risk-reduction group session.Control: 1-hour HIV-alcohol information group session.Assessment: Baseline, 3, and 6 months. | The following behaviors were improved significantly at 3 months among the intervention group:
alcohol use before sex unprotected intercourse percent of sex with condoms number of sex partners. Intervention effects were significantly stronger in those drinking less and dissipated at 6 months. | Alcohol measures: AUDIT, frequency of drinking before sex in previous month. Change in AUDIT scores not reported.7% HIV infected in intervention group. 4% HIV infected in control group. |