| Literature DB >> 30024903 |
Kathrine Meyers1, Yumeng Wu1, Atrina Brill2, Theodorus Sandfort3, Sarit A Golub2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Phase III trials of long-acting injectable (LAI) PrEP, currently underway, have great potential for expanding the menu of HIV prevention options. Imagining a future in which multiple PrEP modalities are available to potential users of biomedical HIV prevention, we investigated which factors might help direct a patient-physician shared-decision making process to optimize the choice of biomedical HIV prevention method.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30024903 PMCID: PMC6053164 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200296
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Hypothesized predictors of LAI PrEP switch intentions.
| Concepts | Indicators | Measures | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A. | ||||
| Physical Experience | Peri-injection pain | I would be worried about pain during the shots | ||
| Injection blemish | I would be worried that there would be a bump or a mark from the shots. | |||
| Post-injection pain | I would be worried about pain in the days after the shot. | |||
| Logistics/Convenience | Injection interval | I would have to get two shots in the butt every 8–12 weeks. | ||
| Daily pill-taking | I wouldn’t need to take a pill every day. | |||
| Adherence when partying | I wouldn’t have to worry about remembering to take medications when I party. | |||
| Adherence when traveling | I wouldn’t have to remember to bring pills with me when I sleep somewhere new or go on a trip. | |||
| Feeling of Control | Logistical control | I wouldn’t have control over starting and stopping the medication because it would be in my body for 8–12 weeks after the shots. | ||
| Psychological control | I would feel less in control of my HIV prevention because I’m not actively taking a pill daily | |||
| Reliability concerns | I would be worried that the shot would stop working in my body and I wouldn’t know. | |||
| Physical Experience | Pain tolerance | “I have a really low tolerance for pain or discomfort; feeling bad can really ruin my day” | 1 |---| 7 | “I have a high tolerance for pain or discomfort; if I feel bad, I just ignore it” |
| Injection tolerance | “I hate getting shots and try to avoid them whenever possible” | 1 |---| 7 | “Shots don’t bother me if I need them” | |
| Pill aversion | “I hate swallowing pills” | 1 |---| 7 | “I don’t mind swallowing pills” | |
| Psychosocial factors | Spontaneity | “I’m a ‘creature of habit,’” | 1 |---| 7 | “I like to be as spontaneous as possible” |
| Routine preference | “I like to have a set routine that I follow every day” | 1 |---| 7 | “I hate having a set routine; I like to be flexible” | |
| Active prevention | “I like to know that I’m doing something active to control my HIV risk” | 1 |---| 7 | “I like having an HIV prevention strategy that I never have to think about” | |
| Protection consistency | “I like an HIV prevention method that is active in my body all the time so I’m always protected” | 1 |---| 7 | “I like an HIV prevention method that I use only when I actually need it” | |
| Early Adopter | “I’m the kind of person who is always the first to try something new” | 1 |---| 7 | “I’m the kind of person who is slow to try new things” | |
| Feelings about adherence | Emotional burden of daily pills | Taking PrEP pills every day feels like an emotional burden | ||
| Personal responsibility | Taking PrEP pills every day makes me feel responsible | |||
| Logistics/Convenience | Pill pick-up | Picking up refills of PrEP pills | ||
| Shot schedule | Returning to the clinic every 8–12 weeks to get your shots | |||
| Pill frequency | Remembering to take a pill every day | |||
| Clinic visit interval | Coming to the clinic for visits every 3 months | |||
Sample characteristics (n = 105).
| Demographics | n (%) |
|---|---|
| <30 | 40 (38.1) |
| > = 30 | 65 (61.9) |
| Black | 10 (9.5) |
| Latino/Hispanic | 28 (26.7) |
| White | 56 (53.3) |
| Multiracial | 6 (5.7) |
| Other | 5 (4.8) |
| Gay | 94 (89.5) |
| Bisexual | 7 (6.7) |
| Queer | 4 (3.8) |
| Less than 4-year college degree | 33 (31.4) |
| 4-year college degree or more | 72 (68.6) |
| Full-time | 62 (59.0) |
| Not full-time | 43 (41.0) |
| <$30,000 | 36 (34.3) |
| $30,000-$50,000 | 38 (36.2) |
| >$50,000 | 31 (29.5) |
| Private Insurance | 52(49.5) |
| Medicaid | 25 (23.8) |
| Uninsured | 21 (20.0) |
| Living status | |
| 34 (32.4) | |
| Not living alone | 71 (67.6) |
| I am in a committed relationship | 26 (24.8) |
| I have a boyfriend or a girlfriend | 16 (15.2) |
| I am casually dating | 21 (20.0) |
| I am single | 42 (40.0) |
| Yes | 15 (35.7) |
| No | 27 (64.3) |
| Neither of us has sex with others, we are monogamous | 14 (33.3) |
| We both have sex with others | 21 (50.0) |
| Only I have sex with others | 4 (9.5) |
| I have sex with others; I don’t know what my partner does | 2 (4.8) |
| I don’t have sex with others; I don’t know what my partners does. | 1 (2.4) |
| 96 (91.4) |
Factors associated with intention to switch from oral to injectable PrEP (n = 105).
| OR | 95% C.I. | aOR | 95% C.I. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Injection tolerance | 1.64 | (1.09, 2.47) | 0.75 | (0.30, 1.89) |
| Concerns about post-injection pain | 0.57 | (0.37, 0.90) | 0.81 | (0.36, 1.80) |
| Injection interval is a con of the shots | 0.30 | (0.17, 0.54) | ||
| Clinic visits for injections are difficult | 0.37 | (0.22, 0.60) | ||
| Taking pills daily is an emotional burden | 1.54 | (0.92, 2.59) | ||
| Taking PrEP pills every day makes me feel responsible | 1.87 | (1.20, 2.92) | ||
| Not taking a pill every day would make me feel less in control of my HIV prevention | 0.55 | (0.35, 0.88) | 0.42 | (0.17,1.03) |
| I wouldn’t have control over starting and stopping the medication | 0.56 | (0.36, 0.88) | 0.83 | (0.35, 1.93) |
| Early adopter | 2.88 | (1.73, 4.81) | ||
| Less than $30,000 | 2.42 | (0.89, 6.59) | 4.07 | (0.63,26.11) |
| $30,000-$50,000 | ||||
| More than $50,000 | ref | ref | ||
Note.
†: p = .10
*: p<0.05,
**: p<0.01,
***: p < .001.