| Literature DB >> 34910276 |
Neeraja Bhavaraju1, Kathleen Shears2, Katie Schwartz3, Saiqa Mullick4, Patriciah Jeckonia5, Joseph Murungu6, Udita Persaud7, Ashley Vij7, Kristine Torjesen3.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Clinical trials have found that the dapivirine vaginal ring (DVR) is safe to use and effective at reducing women's risk of acquiring HIV infection. As countries prepare for the introduction of this novel long-acting, woman-controlled prevention method, an examination of key learnings from oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) delivery will help programs leverage successful innovations and approaches to support DVR scale-up and expand the method mix for HIV prevention. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: AGYW; Dapivirine vaginal ring; HIV prevention; PrEP; Pre-exposure prophylaxis; Sub-Saharan Africa
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34910276 PMCID: PMC8671875 DOI: 10.1007/s11904-021-00577-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr HIV/AIDS Rep ISSN: 1548-3568 Impact factor: 5.071
Key lessons from oral PrEP that can inform DVR introduction
| Lessons from oral PrEP | Application to DVR introduction | Additional DVR considerations |
|---|---|---|
Scaling back risk assessments and eligibility requirements to offer oral PrEP to all who requested it removed unnecessary barriers to its use and enabled programs to deliver PrEP in more accessible health facilities and community-based sites | The DVR’s safety profile offers the opportunity to make it available to all HIV-negative clients who request it from the outset, with limited requirements for laboratory testing or application of screening criteria | If found safe and feasible, use of HIV self-testing to monitor the HIV status of DVR users could further expand access to the DVR in diverse settings |
The use of diverse service delivery models for oral PrEP increased access and uptake, especially among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) | The clients most likely to benefit from the DVR are also more likely to be reached through a wide range of service delivery channels, such as family planning, antenatal and postnatal care, and youth-friendly services, including mobile or community-based services. Multi-month dispensing, task shifting, and virtual counseling approaches could support DVR delivery across channels | As a non-systemic product, the DVR could be made available in community-based settings and pharmacies more readily than oral PrEP; however, its classification by regulatory authorities will determine where and by whom the DVR can be provided |
Addressing healthcare worker bias and strengthening culturally competent care improved oral PrEP access, especially for AGYW | Widespread, continuous efforts to sensitize healthcare workers, address bias, and strengthen culturally competent care will be particularly important to support uptake and effective use of the DVR because it is a new form of PrEP that will be unfamiliar to most potential users | Healthcare workers will also need to be equipped to discuss the use of a vaginally inserted product, the potential benefits of a long-acting product, and the differences in efficacy and side effects to help end users make informed choices among multiple HIV prevention options |
Campaigns to improve partner and community acceptance were necessary to complement targeted demand creation and support oral PrEP uptake and effective use | Sustained demand creation and engagement of partners, peers, and community members will be critical for the ring as a new product form. Messages about protection, wellness, empowerment, and pleasure developed for oral PrEP will be equally applicable to the DVR | New messaging will be needed to build familiarity with a vaginal product and support informed choice across products. Campaigns to increase demand for and community acceptance of the DVR will need to reflect and address locally relevant myths and misconceptions about vaginally inserted products |
Adherence support and monitoring for oral PrEP have evolved to reflect growing understanding that oral PrEP users experience varying levels of risk over time and may start or stop using oral PrEP in response to changes in their relationship status or sexual behaviors | Support for and monitoring of effective use of the DVR should incorporate an understanding of varying levels of risk and potential discontinuous patterns of use. In addition, tools that put information in the hands of users (e.g., websites, text messages, WhatsApp groups, and chat bots) will likely be effective in supporting user decision-making across HIV prevention methods | Introduction of the DVR provides an opportunity to further evolve support for and monitoring of effective use across the portfolio of biomedical HIV prevention methods |