| Literature DB >> 34719745 |
Elizabeth Irungu1, Nomhle Khoza2, Jennifer Velloza3.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This review summarizes interventions to promote HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) use among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in HIV endemic settings, while also highlighting gaps in our current measures of PrEP intervention success. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Adherence; Adolescent girls and young women; HIV prevention; Pre-exposure prophylaxis; Prevention-effective use; Uptake
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34719745 PMCID: PMC8557703 DOI: 10.1007/s11904-021-00576-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr HIV/AIDS Rep ISSN: 1548-3568 Impact factor: 5.071
Summary of current findings on individual- and interpersonal-level interventions to support effective PrEP use
| Intervention | Study | Key findings | Potential barriers to delivery |
|---|---|---|---|
| mHealth | HPTN 082 | SMS were acceptable | SMS fatigue, smartphone access, phone data |
| MPYA | SMS reminders were ineffective in promoting PrEP adherence | ||
| PrEP SMART | Ongoing study | ||
| POWER | SMS was motivating and helped participants remember clinic visits | ||
| Drug-level feedback | HPTN 082 | Drug-level feedback counseling was not effective in increasing PrEP adherence | Drug-level feedback can be costly and logistically challenging |
| PrEP SMART | Ongoing study | ||
| Adherence counseling | EMPOWER | GBV screening and counseling acceptable and feasible | Drop-offs in retention for clinic visits, provider training and time for counseling delivery |
| PrEP SMART | Ongoing study | ||
| Peer groups | EMPOWER | Peer based club did not enhance PrEP adherence; clubs were acceptable, valuable for sharing tips on managing side effects | AGYW have busy schedules led to poor attendance of the clubs |
| HPTN 082 | Monthly adherence clubs acceptable. Approximately 70% AGYW enrolled in the trial attended at least one adherence club at three months of PrEP use | ||
| Decision support tool | POWER | AGYW who had access to the tool had 20% continuation, compared to 11% in the other website, resulting in 1.97 times the odds of PrEP continuation at month 1 than those in usual care | Limited time for completing the decision tool, smartphone access, phone data |
Summary of current findings on community and health systems interventions to promote youth-friendly PrEP delivery
| Intervention type | Study | Country | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adolescent-friendly PrEP demand creation | 3P | South Africa | A PrEP video developed for demand creation was accepted by AGYW and generated high demand for PrEP |
| Jilinde Project | Kenya | Over a 2-year period trained youth peer providers (YPP) reached 30,713 AGYW with PrEP messages compared to 8853 reached by community health volunteers | |
| HPTN 082 | South Africa, Zimbabwe | There was high acceptability for adherence clubs with 70% of enrolled AGYW attending at least one adherence club at 3 months of PrEP use | |
| PrIYA | Kenya | Qualitative interviews with women using PrEP in pregnancy identified health providers as facilitators of PrEP use who could explain PrEP to male partners on behalf of pregnant women | |
| Modified PrEP refill and visit schedules | PlusPills | South Africa | PrEP usage decreased and adherence among adolescents diminished when visits became less frequent |
| Community-based, de-medicalized, and integrated PrEP delivery approaches | POWER | Kenya, South Africa | PrEP services for AGYW are offered at family planning clinics, youth friendly clinics, and mobile youth friendly clinics with high uptake across these sites |