| Literature DB >> 30683103 |
Ariana W K Katz1, Barbara S Mensch2, Kubashni Woeber3, Petina Musara4, Juliane Etima5, Ariane van der Straten6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In biomedical prevention trials, correct and consistent use of the investigational product is crucial to determine efficacy. Product adherence in VOICE, a phase 2B randomized trial of a vaginal gel and oral tablets for HIV prevention, was low (~ 34%), yet self-reported adherence and retention was high (> 90%). This analysis from VOICE-D, a post-trial qualitative ancillary study, explores motivations to participate in VOICE, and possible sources of misalignment between the stated priorities of the trial and the participants.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical trials; HIV prevention; Microbicides; Motivation to participate; Oral PrEP; VOICE trial
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30683103 PMCID: PMC6347781 DOI: 10.1186/s12905-019-0713-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.809
Responses to VOICE termination visit survey (TVB/TOB) on motivation(s) to join VOICE at VOICE-D sites
| Participated in VOICE-D at VOICE-D Sites | ||
|---|---|---|
| Yes ( | No ( | |
| Motivation to join VOICE (multiple answers allowed) | ||
| To help test a product that may prevent women from getting HIV | 101 (95%) | 660 (97%) |
| To get information about HIV prevention | 92 (88%) | 618 (91%) |
| To be tested for HIV | 89 (84%) | 603 (89%) |
| For the free or better quality health care during the trial |
|
|
| For the financial reimbursement | 13 (13%) | 73 (11%) |
| Other | ||
| | 0 (0%) | 2 (< 1%) |
| | 95 (100%) | 640 (100%) |
*Bold text signifies
p < 0.05 using Fisher’s exact p value
Demographic information of VOICE-D participants in either stage (n = 171)
| Total ( | Durban, South Africa | Harare, Zimbabwe | Kampala, Uganda | Difference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | |||||
| Median (mean, min-max) | 28 (28.9, 20–41) | 25 (26.8, 20–40) | 29 (29.6, 21–41) | 29 (29.9, 20–41) |
|
| Married | |||||
| Yes | 92 (54%) | 0 (0%) | 57 (88%) | 35 (59%) |
|
| No | 79 (46%) | 47 (100%) | 8 (12%) | 24 (41%) | |
| If unmarried ( | 68 (86%) | 43 (91%) | 6 (75%) | 19 (79%) | 0.2147 |
| Partner has other sexual partners | |||||
| Yes | 48 (30%) | 6 (14%) | 12 (19%) | 30 (56%) |
|
| No | 12 (8%) | 3 (7%) | 3 (5%) | 6 (11%) | |
| Don’t know | 100 (63%) | 34 (79%) | 48 (76%) | 18 (33%) | |
| # of lifetime sex partnersb | |||||
| Median (mean, min-max) | 3 (10.8, 1–99+) | 2 (3.4, 1–15) | 1 (2.4, 1–35) | 5 (26.1, 2–99+) |
|
| # of children alive at birth | |||||
| Median (mean, min-max) | 2 (2.1, 0–6) | 1 (1.3, 0–4) | 2 (2.3, 1–5) | 2 (2.5, 0–6) |
|
| # of children taking care of | |||||
| Median (mean, min-max) | 2 (2.3, 0–6) | 1 (1.5, 0–6) | 3 (2.7, 1–6) | 3 (2.7, 1–5) |
|
| Completed secondary school or more | 68 (40%) | 20 (43%) | 28 (43%) | 55 (93%) |
|
| Earns own income | 125 (73%) | 40 (85%) | 35 (54%) | 50 (85%) |
|
| Method of earning incomea | |||||
| Formal employment | 28 (22%) | 9 (23%) | 6 (17%) | 13 (26%) | 0.6616 |
| Self-employment | 67 (54%) | 1 (3%) | 29 (83%) | 37 (74%) |
|
| Other | 33 (26%) | 33 (83%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
|
| Partner provides financial/material support | 146 (91%) | 36 (84%) | 58 (92%) | 52 (96%) | 0.1036 |
| SES Scorec | |||||
| Lowest 40% | 68 (40%) | 7 (15%) | 16 (25%) | 45 (76%) |
|
| Middle | 70 (41%) | 18 (38%) | 38 (58%) | 14 (24%) | |
| Highest 20% | 33 (19%) | 22 (47%) | 11 (17%) | 0 (0%) | |
aParticipants with 99 or more sex partners were recorded as ‘99’; bMultiple answers allowed; cAn SES indicator variable was created using principal component analysis (PCA) of 10 demographic assets from the VOICE-D CRF including: home ownership; number of rooms in household; household assets of electricity, radio, television, mobile telephone, non-mobile telephone, refrigerator; toilet facilities; and drinking water sources [50]. A tri-level categorical variable (lowest 40%, middle 40%, and highest 20%) was created based on the first eigenvalue and the SAS-generated PRIN1 score [51]; ϮP-value from Fisher’s Exact test for categorical variables and Kruskal-Wallis test for continuous variables.
Bold text signifies p<0.05.