| Literature DB >> 34036459 |
Kenneth H Mayer1,2, Dorina Onoya3, Jacob Bor4,5, Charlie Fischer6, Mirva Modi6, Bruce Richman7, Cameron Kinker7, Rachel King8, Sarah K Calabrese9, Idah Mokhele3, Tembeka Sineke3, Thembelihle Zuma10,11,12, Sydney Rosen6,3, Till Bärnighausen10,13.
Abstract
People on HIV treatment with undetectable virus cannot transmit HIV sexually (Undetectable = Untransmittable, U = U). However, the science of treatment-as-prevention (TasP) may not be widely understood by people with and without HIV who could benefit from this information. We systematically reviewed the global literature on knowledge and attitudes related to TasP and interventions providing TasP or U = U information. We included studies of providers, patients, and communities from all regions of the world, published 2008-2020. We screened 885 papers and abstracts and identified 72 for inclusion. Studies in high-income settings reported high awareness of TasP but gaps in knowledge about the likelihood of transmission with undetectable HIV. Greater knowledge was associated with more positive attitudes towards TasP. Extant literature shows low awareness of TasP in Africa where 2 in 3 people with HIV live. The emerging evidence on interventions delivering information on TasP suggests beneficial impacts on knowledge, stigma, HIV testing, and viral suppression.Review was pre-registered at PROSPERO: CRD42020153725.Entities:
Keywords: Systematic review; Treatment-as-Prevention; Undetectable = Untransmittable
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34036459 PMCID: PMC8147591 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-021-03296-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Fig. 2Years of publication and data collection of included studies. Note Year of publication is the year when the article was published or abstract presented. Year of data collection is the mid-point of the reported data collection period
Characteristics of included studies by region and study population, Jan 2008–Oct 2020, (n = 72)
Color scheme illustrates cells where there are more studies (green) vs. fewer (red). Domains, methods, and population classifications are defined in the methods section. Studies may appear in multiple domains, populations, and regions, and therefore the row and column totals do not reflect the sum of the cells
Fig. 3Association between knowledge and acceptability of TasP in studies that assessed both
Impact evaluations of interventions disseminating information on TasP/U = U
| Study | Intervention description | Comparison | Study design | Outcome measure | Result description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kalichman et al. (2011) | Intensive behavioral intervention for PLHIV: Integrated risk reduction and adherence intervention, with information provided on HIV transmission and viral load. Intervention informed by conflict theory of decision making | Attention-placebo control: support group for individuals living with HIV/AIDS | 436 participants randomized to treatment or control; followed up via monthly telephone-based pill counts and surveys at 3, 6, and 9 months | Medication adherence; condomless sex with HIV-negative partners; and self-reported STIs; beliefs about TasP | The intervention led to increased ART adherence, less condomless sex with HIV-negative partners, and fewer new reported bacterial STIs. The proportion of ART taken was approximately 10 percentage points higher in the intervention group relative to the control group over the follow-up period (p < 0.05) |
| Kalichman et al. (2018) | Mobile health behavioral intervention for PLHIV: One in person workshop and four phone sessions addressing TasP, ART adherence, access to care, sexual decisions, and other health topics. Informed by Social Cognitive Theory | Attention-placebo control: sessions focused on HIV-unrelated health goals and behaviors | 500 participants randomized to treatment or control; biomarkers collected at 12 months; monthly pill counts and 3-monthly surveys | HIV viral load; genital tract inflamation; medication adherence; condomless sex with HIV-negative partners; self-reported STIs; TasP beliefs | Intervention group had lower viral load and greater ART adherence, with no increase in reported STIs or genital tract inflamation. Relative to controls, the intervention group had significantly lower 12-month viral load (5326 vs. 11,914 copies/μL, OR 0.56, p < 0.01) |
| Smith, et al. (2020) | Recruitment materials for HIV testing: Flyer and script recruiting men to HIV testing at local testing centers using language about U = U/TasP. Informed by behavioral economics theory on framing | Attention placebo control: flyer and script recruiting men to HIV testing at testing center, no U = U message | 1048 men were invited for HIV testing over 12 days each at 5 mobile testing sites; 180 men tested and participated in a survey | Participation in same-day HIV testing | In the SOC group, 13% tested for HIV. In the U = U group, 22% tested for HIV. Men in the U = U group had greater odds of getting tested for HIV (aOR 1.58, 95%CI 0.98, 2.57), (p < 0.1) |
| Derksen et al. (2020) | Community health education meeting: provided information on both health and prevention benefits of ART and about transmission risks with and without ART. Informed by microeconomic model in which community knowledge of TasP reduces HIV stigma | Attention-placebo control: health education meeting giving information just on the health benefits of ART | 122 villages stratified and randomly assigned to intervention vs. control | Uptake of HIV testing at local clinics; survey at 4-months after baseline (n = 1358) | In post-intervention survey, 19% of controls and 80% of intervention group chose ART as an HIV prevention method. The intervention reduced discriminatory beliefs and increased uptake of HIV testing by over one-third, from 0.56 to 0.76% per month at community level (p < 0.05) |