| Literature DB >> 28540562 |
Roland C Merchant1,2,3, Melissa A Clark4, Tao Liu5, Justin Romanoff5, Joshua G Rosenberger6, Jose Bauermeister7, Kenneth H Mayer8.
Abstract
We aimed to determine in a randomized trial if young adult black, Hispanic, and white men-who-have-sex-with-men (YMSM) are more likely to complete home-based oral fluid rapid HIV self-testing than either mail-in blood sample collection or medical facility/community organization-based HIV testing. Stratified by race/ethnicity, participants were randomly assigned to use a free oral fluid rapid HIV self-test (n = 142), a free mail-in blood sample collection HIV test (n = 142), or be tested at a medical facility/community organization of their choice (n = 141). Of the 425 participants, completion of assigned test (66% oral fluid vs. 40% mail-in blood sample vs. 56% medical facility/community), willingness to refer (36% oral fluid vs. 20% mail-in blood sample vs. 26% medical facility/community), and legitimate referrals (58% oral fluid vs. 43% mail-in blood sample vs. 43% medical facility/community) were greater in the oral fluid rapid HIV self-test than the mail-in blood sample collection HIV test arm, but not the medical facility/community testing arm. There were no differences in assigned test completion by race/ethnicity. Although free home-based oral fluid rapid HIV self-testing showed moderate promise in facilitating HIV testing among black, Hispanic, and white YMSM, it did not lead to greater testing than directing these YMSM to medical facility/community HIV testing venues. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02369627.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical trial; HIV testing; Men-who-have-sex-with-men; Young adult
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 28540562 PMCID: PMC5701881 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-017-1802-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165