| Literature DB >> 33713213 |
Ashley J Mayo1, Erica N Browne2, Elizabeth T Montgomery2, Kristine Torjesen3, Thesla Palanee-Phillips4, Nitesha Jeenarain5, Linly Seyama6, Kubashni Woeber5, Ishana Harkoo7, Krishnaveni Reddy4, Tchangani Tembo8, Prisca Mutero9, Thelma Tauya9, Miria Chitukuta9, Brenda Gati Mirembe10, Lydia Soto-Torres11, Elizabeth R Brown12, Jared M Baeten13,14, Ariane van der Straten2,15.
Abstract
We evaluated the acceptability of the 25 mg dapivirine vaginal ring (DVR) as an HIV prevention intervention and its influence on DVR adherence in the MTN-020/ASPIRE phase III trial. Acceptability measures were captured using ACASI at month 3 and end of product use (median 24 months, IQR 15-30). Monthly returned rings were classified as nonadherent if dapivirine release rate was ≤ 0.9 mg/month. Associations between acceptability measures and nonadherence were estimated using Poisson regression models with robust standard errors. At month 3 (N = 2334), 88% reported DVR was comfortable, 80% were unaware of it during daily activities, and 74% never felt it during sex. At exit, 66% were 'very likely' to use DVR in the future. Acceptability was found to differ significantly by country across several measures including wearing the ring during sex, during menses, partner acceptability, impact on sexual pleasure and willingness to use the ring in the future. Risk of nonadherence at month 12 was elevated if DVR was felt during sex at month 3 (aRR 1.67, 95% CI 1.26, 2.23). Risk of nonadherence in the last year of study participation was elevated if, at exit, participants minded wearing during sex (aRR 2.08, 95% CI 1.52, 2.85), during menses (aRR 1.57, 95% CI 1.06, 2.32), reported a problematic change to the vaginal environment (aRR 1.57, 95% CI 1.12, 2.21), and were not "very likely" to use DVR in the future (aRR 1.31, 95% CI 1.02, 1.68). DVR acceptability was overall high yet varied by country. Addressing perceived ring interference with sex, menses, or problematic changes to the vaginal environment in future interventions could help improve adherence, as could embracing sex-positive messaging related to ring use and increased pleasure.Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01617096.Entities:
Keywords: Acceptability; Adherence; HIV prevention; Sub-Saharan Africa; Vaginal ring
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33713213 PMCID: PMC8222015 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-021-03205-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
ASPIRE acceptability measures
| Acceptability measurea | Response options | Assessed at visit | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enrollment | Month 3 | PUEVb | ||
| Overall acceptability | ||||
| If in the future a vaginal ring was available that provided some protection against HIV, and it was similar to the one you used in this study, how likely would you be to keep it inserted in your vagina every day? | Very unlikely, unlikely, likely, very likely | X | X | |
| Use attributes | ||||
| How difficult was it to insert the vaginal ring the last time you inserted it? | Very difficult, somewhat difficult, not difficult at all | X | X | |
| How difficult was it to take the vaginal ring out the last time you took it out? | Very difficult, somewhat difficult, not difficult at all | X | X | |
| In the past 3 months, how did it feel to have the vaginal ring inside you every day? | Usually comfortable, sometimes uncomfortable, usually uncomfortable | X | X | |
| In the past 3 months, were you aware of the vaginal ring during your normal daily activities? | Most of the time, sometimes, never | X | X | |
| Did you mind wearing the ring during menses? | Yes, no, did not wear the vaginal ring during menses, did not have menses during the study | X | ||
| Have you noticed any of the following changes in your vagina while wearing the vaginal ring: vagina was wetter, vaginas was drier? | Vagina was wetter, vagina was drier, no change noticed | X | ||
| [If wetter or drier]: was this change a problem for you? | Yes, no | |||
| Effects on sex | ||||
| In the past 3 months, how often did you feel the vaginal ring inside you when you had sex? | Most of the time, sometimes, never, did not have sex in the past 3 months | X | X | |
| In the past 3 months, did any of your partners feel the vaginal ring inside of you when you had sex? | Yes, no, don't know | X | X | |
| How does the vaginal ring affect your sexual pleasure? | Increases pleasure, does not change pleasure, decreases pleasure | X | ||
| Did you mind wearing the ring during sex? | Yes, no, did not wear the vaginal ring during sex, did not have sex during the study | X | ||
| Partner's attitude | ||||
| Was the vaginal ring acceptable to your primary partner? | Yes, no, don't know | X | ||
| Has your primary sex partner ever asked you to stop wearing the ring? | Yes, no | X | ||
aMeasures are organized by component of acceptability as outlined by Mensch et al. [11]
bPUEV product use end visit, the penultimate visit when study product dispensing was permanently discontinued (median 24 months, IQR 15–30 months)
Baseline characteristics of participants in the ASPIRE trial (Aug 2012–Jun 2015) who completed acceptability measures at month-3 and/or PUEV
| Total | ||
|---|---|---|
| N | (%) | |
| Total | 2562 | (100) |
| Age, years—mean, median (IQR) | 27.2, 26 | (22–31) |
| 18–21 | 507 | (20) |
| 22–45 | 2055 | (80) |
| Completed secondary school | 1172 | (46) |
| Earns own income | 1156 | (45) |
| Has primary sex partner | 2496 | (98) |
| Currently married | 1058 | (41) |
| ≥ 2 male sex partners in past 3 mo | 1489 | (58) |
| Transactional sex in past year | 156 | (6) |
| Parity > 0 | 2350 | (92) |
| Current contraceptive method | ||
| Injectable | 1407 | (55) |
| Implant | 494 | (19) |
| Intrauterine device (IUD) | 319 | (13) |
| Oral contraceptive pills | 278 | (11) |
| Male condoms | 94 | (4) |
| Sterilizationa | 77 | (3) |
PUEV product use end visit, IQR interquartile range
aTubal ligation/hysterectomy/laparoscopy/other surgical procedure that causes sterilization
Fig. 1Overall acceptability of the dapivirine vaginal ring, as measured by future likelihood of use at baseline and PUEV
Acceptability of the dapivirine vaginal ring at PUEV, based on all months of use, by country
| Malawi | South Africa | Uganda | Zimbabwe | Total | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | (%) | N | (%) | N | (%) | N | (%) | N | (%) | |
| Total | 259 | (100) | 1136 | (100) | 238 | (100) | 637 | (100) | 2270 | (100) |
| PUEV study month—mean, median (IQR) | 14.4, 13 (11–16) | 20.3, 24 (13–27) | 21.9, 22 (19–27) | 18.9, 19 (13–24) | 19.4, 20 (13–27) | |||||
| Use attributes | ||||||||||
| Problematic change to vaginal environmenta | 19 | (7) | 125 | (11) | 19 | (8) | 24 | (4) | 187 | (8) |
| Vagina wetter | 13 | (5) | 109 | (10) | 13 | (5) | 20 | (3) | 155 | (7) |
| Vagina drier | 6 | (2) | 16 | (1) | 6 | (3) | 4 | (1) | 32 | (1) |
| Mind wearing the ring during mensesa | 90 | (35) | 93 | (8) | 183 | (77) | 6 | (1) | 372 | (16) |
| Did not have menses during the study | 24 | (9) | 147 | (13) | 20 | (8) | 26 | (4) | 217 | (10) |
| Effects on sex | ||||||||||
| Mind wearing the ring during sexa | 90 | (35) | 109 | (10) | 203 | (85) | 2 | (< 1) | 404 | (18) |
| Did not have sex during the study | 4 | (2) | 13 | (1) | 0 | (0) | 1 | (< 1) | 18 | (1) |
| Ring's effect on sexual pleasurea,b | ||||||||||
| Increases sexual pleasure | 152 | (59) | 358 | (32) | 85 | (36) | 283 | (44) | 878 | (39) |
| Decreases sexual pleasure | 4 | (2) | 44 | (4) | 10 | (4) | 3 | (1) | 61 | (3) |
| No change to sexual pleasure | 99 | (38) | 719 | (63) | 143 | (60) | 350 | (55) | 1311 | (58) |
| Partner’s attitude | ||||||||||
| Ring was acceptable to partnera | ||||||||||
| Yes | 231 | (89) | 794 | (70) | 101 | (42) | 484 | (76) | 1610 | (71) |
| No | 15 | (6) | 142 | (13) | 59 | (25) | 34 | (5) | 250 | (11) |
| Don’t know | 13 | (5) | 199 | (18) | 78 | (33) | 119 | (19) | 409 | (18) |
| Partner ever asked you to stop wearing the ringa | 20 | (8) | 158 | (14) | 27 | (11) | 34 | (5) | 239 | (11) |
| Overall acceptability, future likelihood of ring usea,c | ||||||||||
| Very likely | 149 | (58) | 673 | (59) | 185 | (78) | 496 | (78) | 1503 | (66) |
| Likely | 82 | (32) | 398 | (35) | 49 | (21) | 140 | (22) | 669 | (30) |
| Unlikely | 16 | (6) | 28 | (3) | 2 | (1) | 1 | (0) | 47 | (2) |
| Very unlikely | 12 | (5) | 36 | (3) | 2 | (1) | 0 | (0) | 50 | (2) |
PUEV product use end visit, IQR interquartile range
aSignificantly different by country, p < 0.001
bMissing response: Malawi (N = 4), South Africa (N = 15), Zimbabwe (N = 1)
cMissing response: South Africa (N = 1)
Acceptability of the dapivirine vaginal ring based on use in the past 3 months, at month-3 visit and PUEV
| Month 3 | PUEV | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | (%) | N | (%) | |
| Total who used ring in past 3 monthsa | 2334 | (100) | 2075 | (100) |
| Use attributes: ease and comfort of use | ||||
| How difficult was it to insert the ring?b | ||||
| Very/somewhat difficult | 346 | (15) | 128 | (6) |
| Not difficult at all | 1974 | (85) | 1938 | (93) |
| How difficult was it to take the ring out?b | ||||
| Very/somewhat difficult | 326 | (14) | 197 | (10) |
| Not difficult at all | 1776 | (76) | 1617 | (78) |
| Never took out ring in past 3 months | 232 | (10) | 261 | (13) |
| Use attributes: physical sensation in situ | ||||
| How did it feel to have the ring inside you every day?b | ||||
| Usually comfortable | 2047 | (88) | 1907 | (92) |
| Sometimes/usually uncomfortable | 286 | (12) | 167 | (8) |
| Were you aware of the ring during normal daily activities?b | ||||
| Most/some of the time | 478 | (21) | 342 | (16) |
| Never | 1855 | (80) | 1732 | (84) |
| Effects on sex | ||||
| Total who had sex in past 3 months | 2310 | (99) | 2011 | (97) |
| How often did you feel the ring during sex? | ||||
| Most/some of the time | 592 | (26) | 474 | (24) |
| Never | 1716 | (74) | 1537 | (76) |
| Did any of your partners feel the ring during sex?b | ||||
| Yes | 444 | (19) | 348 | (17) |
| No | 1600 | (69) | 1389 | (69) |
| Don’t know | 265 | (12) | 273 | (14) |
PUEV product use end visit
aA total of 2474 participants had ACASI data available from Month 3, and 2270 from PUEV. PUEV ACASI data were missing from 2 sites due to transmission errors
bSignificant difference between Month-3 and PUEV (p < 0.05). Differences over time were tested using mixed-effect regression models, controlling for country, treatment arm, and number of months of follow-up
Associations between acceptability and nonadherence among women randomized to dapivirine vaginal ring
| N (%) | Nonadherence, at Month 12a | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| aRRb | 95% CI | p value | ||
| Acceptability measures from month-3 ACASI (N = 1058) | ||||
| Use attributes | ||||
| Sometimes/usually uncomfortable to have ring inside every day | 136 (13) | 1.07 | (0.73, 1.56) | 0.72 |
| Very/somewhat difficult to insert | 150 (14) | 1.01 | (0.70, 1.46) | 0.95 |
| Some/most of the time aware of ring during normal activities | 216 (20) | 1.24 | (0.91, 1.69) | 0.17 |
| Effects on sex | ||||
| Felt ring during sex | 256 (24) | 1.67 | (1.26, 2.23) | < 0.001 |
| Partner felt ring during sex (yes vs. no) | 192 (18) | 1.39 | (0.99, 1.95) | 0.06 |
ACASI audio computer-assisted self-interview, CI confidence interval, PUEV product use end visit
aMonth 12 ring had dapivirine release rate ≤ 0.9 mg/month (N = 165 of 1058; 16%)
bAdjusted relative risk (aRR) estimated using separate Poisson regression models with robust standard errors for each acceptability measure. All models adjusted for country, total months of enrollment, and enrollment post adherence intervention initiation
cThree rings in last year of study had dapivirine release rate ≤ 0.9 mg/month (N = 200 of 1042; 19%)
dMissing response (N = 9)