Robert L Cook1, Kathleen M Weber2, Dao Mai3, Kathleen Thoma4, Xingdi Hu5, Babette Brumback6, Manju Karki7, Kendall Bryant8, Mobeen Rathore4, Mary Young3, Mardge Cohen9. 1. Departments of Epidemiology and Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States. Electronic address: cookrl@ufl.edu. 2. Hektoen Institute of Medicine, Chicago, IL, United States; Cook County Health and Hospital Systems, Chicago, IL, United States. 3. Georgetown University, Washington, DC, United States. 4. University of Florida Center for HIV/AIDS Research, Education and Service (UF CARES), Jacksonville, FL, United States. 5. Department of Epidemiology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States. 6. Department of Biostatistics, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States. 7. Department of Pathology, Immunology, and Laboratory Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States. 8. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, Bethesda, MD, United States. 9. John H. Stroger Hospital of Cook County/Rush, Chicago, IL, United States.
Abstract
BACKGROUND:Women living with HIV/AIDS whodrink alcohol are at increased risk for adverse health outcomes, but there is little evidence on best methods for reducing alcohol consumption in this population. We conducted a pilot study to determine the acceptability and feasibility of conducting a larger randomized clinical trial of naltrexone vs. placebo to reduce alcohol consumption in women living with HIV/AIDS. METHODS: We designed the trial with input from community and scientific review. Women with HIV who reported current hazardous drinking (>7 drinks/week or ≥4 drinks per occasion) were randomly assigned to daily oral naltrexone (50mg) or placebo for 4months. We evaluated willingness to enroll, adherence to study medication, treatment side effects, and drinking and HIV-related outcomes. RESULTS:From 2010 to 2012, 17 women enrolled (mean age 49years, 94% African American). Study participation was higher among women recruited from an existing HIV cohort study compared to women recruited from an outpatient HIV clinic. Participants took 73% of their study medication; 82% completed the final assessment (7-months). Among all participants, mean alcohol consumption declined substantially from baseline to month 4 (39.2 vs. 12.8 drinks/week, p<0.01) with continued reduction maintained at 7-months. Drinking reductions were similar in both naltrexone and placebo groups. CONCLUSIONS: A pharmacologic alcohol intervention was acceptable and feasible in women with HIV, with reduced alcohol consumption noted in women assigned to both treatment and placebo groups. However, several recruitment challenges were identified that should be addressed to enhance recruitment in future alcohol treatment trials.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND:Women living with HIV/AIDS who drink alcohol are at increased risk for adverse health outcomes, but there is little evidence on best methods for reducing alcohol consumption in this population. We conducted a pilot study to determine the acceptability and feasibility of conducting a larger randomized clinical trial of naltrexone vs. placebo to reduce alcohol consumption in women living with HIV/AIDS. METHODS: We designed the trial with input from community and scientific review. Women with HIV who reported current hazardous drinking (>7 drinks/week or ≥4 drinks per occasion) were randomly assigned to daily oral naltrexone (50mg) or placebo for 4months. We evaluated willingness to enroll, adherence to study medication, treatment side effects, and drinking and HIV-related outcomes. RESULTS: From 2010 to 2012, 17 women enrolled (mean age 49years, 94% African American). Study participation was higher among women recruited from an existing HIV cohort study compared to women recruited from an outpatientHIV clinic. Participants took 73% of their study medication; 82% completed the final assessment (7-months). Among all participants, mean alcohol consumption declined substantially from baseline to month 4 (39.2 vs. 12.8 drinks/week, p<0.01) with continued reduction maintained at 7-months. Drinking reductions were similar in both naltrexone and placebo groups. CONCLUSIONS: A pharmacologic alcohol intervention was acceptable and feasible in women with HIV, with reduced alcohol consumption noted in women assigned to both treatment and placebo groups. However, several recruitment challenges were identified that should be addressed to enhance recruitment in future alcohol treatment trials.
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