| Literature DB >> 31226165 |
Kayla Stankevitz1, Katie Schwartz1, Theresa Hoke1, Yixuan Li1, Michele Lanham1, Imelda Mahaka2, Saiqa Mullick3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: ARV-based pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has the potential to avert many new HIV infections, yet little is known about how to reach women at high risk for HIV infection and motivate them to initiate PrEP. Clinical trials have succeeded in recruiting at-risk participants, evidenced by control arm HIV incidence ≥3% (defined by the World Health Organization as "substantial risk"). We examined experiences from HIV prevention trials to document recruitment strategies and identify practical, potentially effective strategies for reaching women in real-world PrEP delivery.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31226165 PMCID: PMC6588242 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0218556
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Trial characteristics.
| Trial | Product | Phase | Trial Duration | Population (age) | Total Enrollment | Location | Control Arm Incidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CAPRISA 004 [ | TFV gel | IIb | 2007–2010 | Women (18–40) | 889 | South Africa | 9.1% |
| TDF2 [ | TDF-FTC | III | 2007–2011 | Women and Men (18–39) | 1219 | Botswana | 3.1% |
| MTN 003 (VOICE) [ | TDF-FTC, TDF, TFV gel | IIb | 2009–2012 | Women (18–45) | 5029 | South Africa, | 5.7% |
| FEM-PrEP [ | TDF-FTC | III | 2009–2013 | Women (18–35) | 2120 | Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania | 5.0% |
| FACTS 001 [ | TFV gel | III | 2011–2014 | Women (18–30) | 2059 | South Africa | 4.0% |
| IPM 027 (The Ring study) [ | dapivirine ring | III | 2012–2016 | Women (18–45) | 1959 | South Africa, Uganda | 6.1% |
| MTN 020 (ASPIRE) [ | dapivirine ring | III | 2012–2015 | Women (18–45) | 2629 | Malawi, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe | 4.5% |
*HIV infection rate in control arm per 100 person-years
**Researchers in Kenya and Tanzania could not be reached for interview and did not participate in the study.
Participant characteristics.
| Characteristics | Number of informants |
|---|---|
| Sex | |
| Female | 23 |
| Male | 8 |
| Role | |
| Site PI | 9 |
| Study Coordinator | 7 |
| Community Manager | 5 |
| Recruitment Officer | 10 |
| Country | |
| South Africa | 23 |
| Uganda | 3 |
| Botswana | 1 |
| Malawi | 2 |
| Zimbabwe | 2 |
| HIV Prevention Trial | |
| MTN 020 (ASPIRE) | 14 |
| MTN 003 (VOICE) | 10 |
| FACTS 001 | 10 |
| IPM 027 (The Ring Study) | 10 |
| FEM-PrEP | 2 |
| CAPRISA 004 | 1 |
| TDF2 | 1 |
| TOTAL | 31 |
*Some interviewees had experience with more than one trial.
Informants discussed strategies they used to reach women with PrEP, both in terms of how to reach women for recruitment purposes and how to effectively deliver and frame messaging around PrEP to motivate uptake.
Recruitment strategies employed in HIV prevention trials.
| Strategy | Description | Number of sites that mentioned using strategy (n = 17) |
|---|---|---|
| Engagement meetings with gatekeepers | Before recruiting in the community, study teams visited gatekeepers-people who had influence within the community-to provide them information about the study and seek support. | 15 |
| Community advisory boards (CABs) | Study teams worked with advisory boards consisting of members of the community to provide information about the study, get information about the community, and ensure the research was community owned. | 10 |
| Community events | Recruitment staff attended local community events, such as health education events or World AIDS Day, and gave educational presentations, handed out study information sheets, and answered questions. | 16 |
| Posters and flyers | Recruitment staff hung posters and handed out flyers in public spaces and health facilities to educate the public about PrEP and promote the trial. | 12 |
| Media | Principal investigators and research staff were interviewed on local or national radio stations and studies ran television commercials to raise awareness about PrEP and promote the trial. | 11 |
| Presentations in waiting rooms | Recruitment staff were stationed in waiting rooms of clinics thought to serve at-risk populations to provide information and answer questions. | 13 |
| Word-of-mouth | Recruitment staff encouraged existing trial participants to promote participation among friends via word-of-mouth. | 12 |
| Venue-based recruitment | Recruitment staff provided information about the trial in areas where women congregate, such as: bars, brothels, shopping malls, communal taps, markets, or places on the street where people socialize. | 10 |
| Door-to-door | Recruitment staff provided door-to-door education about PrEP and the trial and discussed the details one-on-one with those who were interested. | 8 |
| Clinician referrals | Clinicians in family planning, STI, or HIV testing and counseling clinics were trained on PrEP and the trial by study staff and asked to educate and refer their clients. | 14 |
* We did not probe specifically for each strategy, so additional sites may have used the strategy but not mentioned it.