| Literature DB >> 26078115 |
Patricia A Defechereux1, Megha Mehrotra1, Albert Y Liu2,3, Vanessa M McMahan1, David V Glidden3, Kenneth H Mayer4, Lorena Vargas5, K Rivet Amico6, Piotr Chodacki7, Telmo Fernandez8, Vivian I Avelino-Silva9, David Burns10, Robert M Grant11,12,13.
Abstract
We conducted a longitudinal and cross-sectional analysis of depressive symptomology in iPrEx, a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of daily, oral FTC/TDF HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in men and transgender women who have sex with men. Depression-related adverse events (AEs) were the most frequently reported severe or life-threatening AEs and were not associated with being randomized to the FTC/TDF arm (152 vs. 144 respectively OR 0.66 95 % CI 0.35-1.25). Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale (CES-D) and a four questions suicidal ideation scale scores did not differ by arm. Participants reporting forced sex at anal sexual debut had higher CES-D scores (coeff: 3.23; 95 % CI 1.24-5.23) and were more likely to have suicidal ideation (OR 2.2; 95 % CI 1.09-4.26). CES-D scores were higher among people reporting non-condom receptive anal intercourse (ncRAI) (OR 1.46; 95 % CI 1.09-1.94). We recommend continuing PrEP during periods of depression in conjunction with provision of mental health services.Entities:
Keywords: Depression; FTC/TDF; HIV prevention; Men who have sex with men; PrEP; iPrEx
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26078115 PMCID: PMC4903104 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-015-1082-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Depression-related clinical AEs, CES-D scores and number of participants who screened positive for suicidal ideation in iPrEx by study arm
| Placebo n (%)e | FTC/TDF n (%) | OR/Coeffb | 95 % CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of participants reporting depression-related AEs (grade 2 or higher)a | 127 (10.18) | 105 (8.37) | 0.81 | [0.62 to 1.06] |
| Number of depression-related AEs (grade 2 or higher)a | 152 (51.35) | 144 (48.65) | 0.66 | [0.35 to 1.25] |
| Number of grade 4 depression-related AEsa | 53 (34.87) | 40 (27.78) | 0.5 | [0.22 to 1.15] |
| CES-D score | 12 | 12c | 0.2b | [−0.46 to 0.86] |
| Number of participants who screened positive for suicidal ideationd | 250 (8.29) | 230 (7.83) | 0.9 | [0.67 to 1.21] |
AE Adverse Event, CES-D Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, FTC/TDF emtricitabine tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, OR odds ratio, 95 % CI confidence interval, Coeff coefficient
aClinical AEs, as defined by the NIH DAIDS Table for Grading the Severity of Adult and Pediatric AEs Version 1.0, December, 2004 (Clarification August 2009) http://rsc.tech-res.com/safetyandpharmacovigilance
bLinear regression coefficient
cMedian CES-D score
dPositive for suicidal ideation is defined as a score ≥3 on any of the four questions in the suicide ideation screener
ePercentages refer to either % of total number participants, or % of total number of events
Demographic characteristics of iPrEx participants with at least one CES-D questionnaire (n = 2115) and without (n = 381)a
| CESD available | No CESD | |
|---|---|---|
| N = 2115 | N = 381 | |
| Age (mean) | 27.4 | 25.8 |
| Race n (%) | ||
| Black/African–American | 180 (8.4) | 34 (9.2) |
| White | 372 (17.5) | 61 (16.6) |
| Mixed/other | 1458 (68.4) | 263 (71.5) |
| Asian | 121 (5.7) | 10 (2.7) |
| Ethnic group n (%) | ||
| Hispanic/Latino | 1517 (71.2) | 288 (78.3) |
| Non-Hispanic/Latino | 614 (28.8) | 80 (21.7) |
| Education n (%) | ||
| Less than secondary | 440 (20.6) | 84 (22.8) |
| Completed secondary | 743 (34.9) | 141 (38.3) |
| Post-secondary | 928 (43.5) | 136 (37.0) |
| Region n (%) | ||
| Brazil | 318 (14.9) | 52 (14.1) |
| Andes | 1423 (66.8) | 277 (75.3) |
| United States | 209 (9.8) | 18 (4.9) |
| South Africa | 72 (3.4) | 16 (4.3) |
| Thailand | 109 (5.1) | 5 (1.4) |
| No. of alcoholic drinks n (%)b | ||
| 0–4 per day | 992 (46.5) | 139 (36.5) |
| ≥5 per day | 772 (36.2) | 159 (41.7) |
| Sexual practices at screening n (%) | ||
| Number of partners in the past 12 months (mean) | 16 | 21 |
| Any non-condom receptive anal intercourse (ncRAI) in the past 12 weeks | 1288 (60.4) | 197 (53.5) |
| Any transactional sex in the past 24 weeks | 848 (39.8) | 179 (48.6) |
aSome categories do not add up to 100 % due to no answers/missing responses. Three participants had questionnaires that were largely incomplete and therefore not used for this analysis
bOn days subject drank in the past 4 weeks
Predictors of depressive symptomology in 2,115 MSM/TGW iPrEx participants for which at least one CES-D was availablea,b
| Na | Median CESDb | Coeffc | 95 % CIc | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Race | ||||
| Mixed/other | 1458 | 12 | ref. | |
| Black/African American | 180 | 12 | 0.37 | [−1.33, 2.07] |
| White | 372 | 11 | −0.88 | [−2.16, 0.41] |
| Asian | 121 | 12.5 | −0.75 | [−2.83, 1.34] |
| Hispanic ethnicity | ||||
| Not Hispanic/Latino | 614 | 12 | ref | |
| Hispanic/Latino | 1517 | 12 | −0.59 | [−1.89, 0.71] |
| Age | ||||
| 18–24 | 1049 | 12 | 1.25 | [−0.07, 2.57] |
| 25–29 | 439 | 12 | 0.95 | [−0.47, 2.37] |
| 30–39 | 404 | 12 | 1.06 | [−0.35, 2.47] |
| ≥40 | 239 | 12 | ref. | |
| Forced Sexd | ||||
| No | 2000 | 12 | ref. | |
| Yes | 83 | 15 | 3.23 | [1.24, 5.23] |
| Alcohole | ||||
| 0–4 per day | 982 | 12 | ref. | |
| ≥5 per day | 770 | 12 | 0.36 | [−0.43 to 1.17] |
| Education | ||||
| <Secondary School | 440 | 13 | ref. | |
| Secondary School | 743 | 12 | −0.29 | [−1.37, 0.79] |
| Post-Secondary School | 928 | 12 | −0.4 | [−145, 0.66] |
|
| ||||
| No | 1863 | 12 | ref. | |
| Yes | 268 | 13 | 1.22 | [0.51, 2.40] |
| Study Site (country) | ||||
| Praca Onze (BRA) | 83 | 12 | ||
| USP (BRA) | 66 | 12 | ||
| Fiocruz (BRA) | 169 | 12 | ||
| INMENSA (PER) | 759 | 13 | ||
| ACSA (PER) | 413 | 12 | ||
| Equidad (ECU) | 251 | 12 | ||
| San Francisco (USA) | 131 | 9 | ||
| Boston (USA) | 78 | 10.5 | ||
| Cape Town (ZFA) | 72 | 12 | ||
| Chiang Mai (THA) | 109 | 13 | ||
Country codes: BRA Brazil, PER Peru, ECU Ecuador, USA United States, ZFA South Africa, THA Thailand
CES-D scores measured after seroconversion were excluded from analysis
Multivariate analyses show that reporting forced sex at anal debut and reporting “trans” identity were the only baseline characteristics significantly associated with an increase in CES-D scores when controlling for all other covariates
AE Adverse Event, CES-D Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, OR Odds Ratio, 95 % CI confidence interval, Coeff coefficient
aNumber of participants
bMedian CES-D scores including all time points at which a CES-D was available (multiple observations per person)
cResults of multilevel mixed model with random effects for site and participant
dForced sex is defined as having reported being “manipulated” or “forced” at the time of anal sex debut, as recorded in the CASI questionnaire
eOn days when alcohol was used in the past 30 days prior to baseline characteristics were collected
f “Trans” identity is defined as self-identifying as “trans” or “a woman” on the screening visit CASI questionnaire
CES-D scores and non-condom Receptive Anal Intercourse (ncRAI) in iPrEx participants
| Odds of having reported ncRAI | ||
|---|---|---|
| CESD Quartile | Odds ratioa | 95 % CI |
| 0–7 | ref | |
| 8–12 | 1.17 | (0.88, 1.57) |
| 13–19 | 1.21 | (0.90, 1.61) |
| 20 and above | 1.46 | (1.09, 1.94) |
| Wald test for linearity | p = 0.012 | |
Sexual practices data was collected at the same time the CES-D questionnaire was administered and reflects behavior over the prior 3 months. ncRAI is considered positive if a participant reports any instance of non-condom receptive anal intercourse during the interview-administered questionnaire
aMixed level logistic regression using the first available CES-D score and corresponding reported sexual practices. Random effects for site were included. Analysis was controlled for number of partners, age of participant, and anti-depressant medication use