| Literature DB >> 27760680 |
Frances M Cowan1,2, Sinead Delany-Moretlwe3, Eduard J Sanders4,5, Nelly R Mugo6,7,8, Fernand A Guedou9, Michel Alary10, Luc Behanzin9, Owen Mugurungi11, Linda-Gail Bekker12.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Of the two million new HIV infections in adults in 2014, 70% occurred in sub-Saharan Africa. Several African countries have already approved guidelines for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for individuals at substantial risk of HIV as part of combination HIV prevention but key questions remain about how to identify and deliver PrEP to those at greatest need. Throughout the continent, individuals in sero-discordant relationships, and members of key populations (sex workers, men who have sex with men (MSM), transgender women and injection drug users) are likely to benefit from the availability of PrEP. In addition, adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) are at substantial risk in some parts of the continent. It has been estimated that at least three million individuals in Africa are likely to be eligible for PrEP according to WHO's criteria. Tens of demonstration projects are planned or underway across the continent among a range of countries, populations and delivery settings. DISCUSSION: In each of the target populations, there are overarching issues related to (i) creating demand for PrEP, (ii) addressing supply-side issues and (iii) providing appropriate and tailored adherence support. Critical for creating demand for PrEP is the normalization of HIV prevention. Community-level interventions which engage opinion leaders as well as empowerment interventions for those at highest risk will be key. Critical to supply of PrEP is that services are accessible for all, including for stigmatized populations. Establishing accessible integrated services provides the opportunity to address other public health priorities including the unmet need for HIV testing, contraception and sexually transmitted infections treatment. National policies need to include minimum standards for training and quality assurance for PrEP implementation and to address supply chain issues. Adherence support needs to recognize that social and structural factors are likely to have an important influence. Combining interventions that build self-efficacy, empowerment and social cohesion, with evidence-based individualized adherence support for PrEP, are most likely to be effective.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; HIV/AIDS; adherence; empowerment; implementation; key populations; pre-exposure prophylaxis; prevention
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27760680 PMCID: PMC5071780 DOI: 10.7448/IAS.19.7.21101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Summary of ongoing and planned PrEP demonstration projects in Africa (as of July 2016)
| Project name | Type of project | Sites | Target population | Proposed enrolment | Dates |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Partners demonstration project | Demonstration project PrEP as a bridge to ART | Kenya, Uganda | HIV sero-discordant couples | 1013 HIV sero-discordant couples | Ongoing since August 2013; to complete follow-up: June 2016. Initial results presented at CROI 2015 |
| Choice for Adolescents Methods for Prevention in South Africa (CHAMPS) | Demonstration project (Pluspills, combined with 2 other projects) | South Africa | Heterosexual male and female adolescents aged 15–19 | 150 | Ongoing since July 2011; Pluspills is expected to be completed in October 2016; UChoose is expected to be completed in June 2016 |
| Sibanye Health Project: Comprehensive HIV Prevention Package for MSM in Southern Africa Pilot Study | Demonstration project (pilot and integrated in a preventive package) | South Africa | MSM | 200 MSM | Ongoing since February 2015; expected completion in May 2016 |
| Sisters Antiretroviral Therapy Programme for Prevention of HIV – An Integrated Response (SAPPH-IRe) | Open label (combined with TasP) | Zimbabwe | FSW | 1200 FSW eligible for PrEP (500 women enrolled as June 2016) | Ongoing since July 2014; expected completion in mid-2016 |
| Gender-Specific Combination HIV Prevention for Youth in High Burden Settings (MP3-Youth) | Demonstration project (within a combination prevention package) | Kenya | Adolescent men and women aged 15–24 | Only women on PrEP (enrolling 1215 total) | Ongoing since November 2014; expected completion in November 2016 |
| Benin Demonstration Project with CHU de Québec (Canada) | Demonstration project (combined with TasP) | Benin | FSW | 250 in PrEP; 100 in TasP | Ongoing since October 2014; expected completion in January 2017 |
| Senegal Demonstration Project with Reseau Africain De Recherche Sur Le Sida, University of Washington and Westat | Demonstration project | Senegal | FSW | 275 | Ongoing since mid-2015; expected completion in late-2016 |
| TAPS Demonstration Project (Wits RHI) | Demonstration project (combined with TasP) | South Africa | FSW (≥18 years) | 400 in PrEP; 300 in TasP | Ongoing since April 2015. Expected completion April 2017 |
| LVCT Health and SWOP Kenya (IPCP-Kenya) | Demonstration project (within a combination prevention package) | Kenya | FSW (≥18 years), MSM (≥18 years), young women at high HIV risk (15–29 years) | 2100 participants | Ongoing; started December 2015. Expected completion December 2016 |
| POWER | Demonstration project (within a package including microbicides) | South Africa, Kenya | Adolescent girls and young women aged 16–24; women aged 25–29 | 1500 | Ongoing, started July 2015, PrEP delivery cohort to begin late 2016. Expected completion June 2020 |
| Anova Health Institute's Health4Men initiative | Demonstration project | South Africa, Lesotho, Tanzania, Swaziland, Thailand, Uganda | MSM | 300 | Ongoing; started December 2015. Expected completion early-2016 |
| CAPRISA 082 | Demonstration project (observational cohort study) | South Africa | Adolescent girls and young women aged 18–24; women aged 25–30 | Total enrolment of 2500, PrEP uptake expected to be 750 | Ongoing, started March 2016. Expected completion April 2021 |
| Nigerian National Agency for the Control of AIDS | Demonstration project (combined with TasP) | Nigeria | Heterosexual HIV sero-discordant couples | Enrolling 600 individuals on PrEP | Ongoing; started late 2015. Expected completion in late 2017 |
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| EMPOWER Consortium Demonstration Project | Demonstration project (within a combination package including violence prevention) | South Africa, Tanzania | Adolescent girls and young women aged 16–24 | To be determined | Planned; expected start mid-2016 |
| Seasonal use of PrEP in Mozambique | Demonstration project on periodical use of PrEP (feasibility phase) | Mozambique | Women and men | To be determined | Feasibility study planning underway |
| DREAMS | Implementation initiative | Kenya, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe | Young women aged 18–24 | 15,119; 3000; 1000; 1451 | Demonstration projects starting mid-2016 |
| Right to care (under DREAMS) | Demonstration project | South Africa | Adolescent girls and young women | To be determined | Planned |
| Tambua Mapema-PLUS | Pilot study | Kenya | Sero-discordant couples including patients with acute HIV infection, identified at care seeking | 75 | Planned, expected start Q4 2016 |
| Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) International – South Africa PrEP Project | Demonstration project | South Africa | Adolescent girls (<24 years old) and MSM | To be determined | Planned |
| HealthRight PrEP Project – Kenya | Demonstration project | Kenya | Male sex workers (MSW) | To be determined | Planned |
| HPTN 082 | Demonstration project (observational cohort study) | South Africa, Zimbabwe | Young women aged 16–25 years | 600 | Planned; start date pending ethics submission, expected start in July 2016. Expected completion in August 2018 |
| UNICEF PrEP Demonstration Program | Demonstration project | South Africa, Brazil, Thailand | Adolescents | Total target 15,071 (South Africa 10,000; Brazil 2671; Thailand, 2400) | Planned; expected start end-2016. Expected completion 2021 |
| Champs PlusPills (DTHF, University of Washington) | Demonstration project | South Africa | Adolescent girls and young women aged 16–25 | To be determined | Planned |
| Church of Scotland PrEP Project | Demonstration project | South Africa | Adolescent girls who are pregnant | To be determined | Planned |
| P3: Private Sector Provision of PrEP | Demonstration project | South Africa and Zimbabwe | Young women aged 20–34 | Planned enrollment is 10,000 in each country | Planned; expected start end-2016 |
| IMPAACT 2009 | Observational study | Malawi, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe | Adolescent girls and young women aged 16–24 who are pregnant | To be determined | Planned; expected start early-2017. Expected completion in 2019/2020 |
| MTN 034/IPM 045 | Phase IIa open label (randomizing participants to either dapivirine ring or oral PrEP) | South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe | Adolescent girls and young women aged 16–17 | 300 | Planned; expected start early-2017 |
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| iPrEx OLE | Open-label extension | South Africa, (Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, Thailand, USA) | MSM and transgender women | 1250 (across all sites) | Completed. Open-label extension of the iPrEx trial ( |
| Partners PrEP OLE | Open-label extension | Kenya, Uganda | HIV sero-discordant couples | 1262 (assigned to TDF or FTC/TDF) | Completed. Open-label extension of the partners PrEP trial; started in July 2011 and was completed in December 2012. ( |
| CDC 494 (TDF2 follow-up) | Open-label extension | Botswana | Heterosexual men and women aged 18–39 | 1219 total (611 assigned to take daily TDF/FTC pill; 608 assigned to placebo) | Completed. Open-label extension of the trial among heterosexual men and women |
| HPTN 067 (ADAPT) | Phase II open-label (comparing 3 timings for drug taking) | South Africa (Thailand, USA) | Women (South Africa); MSM and transgender women (Thailand & USA) | 622 | Started in August 2011 and was completed in December 2014; final analyses are underway. ( |
Adapted from AVAC's “Ongoing and Planned PrEP Demonstration and Implementation Studies” table, and .
Implementation research questions for different target populations
| FSW | MSM | AGYW | SD couples | Following acute infection | All | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demand side | How to create demand without stigmatizing FSW? | How can demand be generated safely in countries where MSM illegal and highly stigmatized | How to improve risk perception among AGYW? | Is PrEP for sero-discordant couples required if countries move to Test and Start? If so for how long? | Is it feasible to recruit HIV-negative partners of individuals with acute infection for PrEP safely and timeously? | |
| How will availability of long-acting/injectable PrEP affect demand and uptake? | What combination of interventions most effectively (and cost effectively) support PrEP across the prevention cascade? | |||||
| Supply side | What is the most appropriate venue for delivery of PrEP? | |||||
| Adherence | Can community-based models of differentiated care to support use of ART be usefully tailored to support PrEP? | |||||