| Literature DB >> 30408431 |
Megan S Dunbar1, Katharine Kripke2, Jessica Haberer3, Delivette Castor4, Shona Dalal5, Wanjiru Mukoma6, Saiqa Mullick7, Pragna Patel8, Jason Reed9, Hasina Subedar10, Daniel Were11, Mitchell Warren12, Kristine Torjesen1.
Abstract
In response to World Health Organization (WHO) guidance recommending oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for all individuals at substantial risk for HIV infection, significant investments are being made to expand access to oral PrEP globally, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. Some have interpreted early monitoring reports from new programs delivering oral PrEP to adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) as suggestive of low uptake. However, a lack of common definitions complicates interpretation of oral PrEP uptake and coverage measures, because various indicators with different meanings and uses are used interchangeably. Furthermore, operationalising these measures in real-world settings is challenged by the difficulties in defining the denominator for measuring uptake and coverage among AGYW, due to the lack of data and experience required to identify the subset of AGYW at substantial risk of HIV infection. This paper proposes an intervention-centric cascade as a framework for developing a common lexicon of metrics for uptake and coverage of oral PrEP among AGYW. In codifying these indicators, approaches to clearly define metrics for uptake and coverage are outlined, and the discussion on 'low' uptake is reframed to focus on achieving the highest possible proportion of AGYW using oral PrEP when they need and want it Recommendations are also provided for making increased investments in implementation research to better quantify the sub-group of AGYW in potential need of oral PrEP.and for improving monitoring systems to more efficiently address bottlenecks in the service delivery of oral PrEP to AGYW so that implementation can be taken to scale.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30408431 PMCID: PMC6429961 DOI: 10.1071/SH18061
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sex Health ISSN: 1448-5028 Impact factor: 2.706
Fig. 1.Oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) cascade.
Oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) cascade term definitions
| 1. Total target population | All HIV-uninfected individuals at substantial risk for HIV infection who could potentially benefit from using oral PrEP. |
| 2. Service availability | The availability of drug, service delivery platforms and infrastructure, including healthcare personnel trained to offer and deliver oral PrEP. |
| 3. Screening uptake | The proportion of the target population who undergo eligibility screening for oral PrEP (number of screened/total target population). |
| 4. Oral PrEP eligibility | The criteria used to define who is eligible to use PrEP, including being HIV-negative and not suspected of having acute HIV infection, being at substantial risk, being clinically eligible and possessing knowledge of oral PrEP. Some eligibility requirements (particularly for assessing risk) vary by country, program and target population. |
| 5. Offer of oral PrEP | The step in which clients who have been determined eligible are offered oral PrEP. |
| 6. Oral PrEP initiation | The process by which those who have been offered PrEP decide to and start taking it. |
| 7. Oral PrEP continuation | The number of clients continuing to be eligible for and receive oral PrEP at sequential visits, at a specified number of months post-initiation. |
| 8. Oral PrEP discontinuation | Stopping the use of PrEP or lacking a PrEP refill. |
| 9. Re-starting PrEP | Someone who has discontinued oral PrEP may decide to start oral PrEP again, which then leads to a process of |
| Oral PrEP adherence | Adherence refers to pills taken according to clinical guidelines during a given prescription period. |
| Oral PrEP uptake | ‘Uptake’ has been defined in multiple ways in the field. Here, we define it as the number who initiate oral PrEP among those offered PrEP – as an individual or facility level measure (number who initiate oral PrEP/number offered oral PrEP). |
| Coverage | A macro-level measure, defined as the proportion of the total target population using oral PrEP at a given time point or over a period of time (total number using PrEP/total target population). |
Fig. 2.Oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) uptake in the United States.