| Literature DB >> 35360893 |
Kristen M Little1, Lola Flomen2, Homaira Hanif3, Sharon M Anderson3, Andrea R Thurman3, Meredith R Clark3, Gustavo F Doncel3.
Abstract
For adolescent girls (AG) and young women (YW), adherence barriers may limit the effectiveness of daily oral HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). Due to its low-burden and long-lasting product attributes, PrEP implants could remove some of the critical adherence barriers of oral PrEP products for individuals at risk of HIV. To explore stated preferences for a long-acting PrEP implant, we conducted a quantitative survey and discrete choice experiment with AG (ages 15-17), YW (18-34), and female sex workers (FSW; ≥ 18) in Gauteng Province, South Africa. We completed 600 quantitative surveys across the three subgroups of women. Respondents stated preference for an implant that provided longer HIV protection (24 months versus 6 months) and required a single insertion. They stated that they preferred a biodegradable implant that could be removed within 1 month of insertion. Respondents had no preference for a particular insertion location. Overall, 78% of respondents said they would be likely (33%) or very likely (45%) to use a PrEP implant were one available, with the majority (82%) stating preference for a product that would provide dual protection against HIV and unintended pregnancies. To reduce their risk of HIV, AG, YW, and FSW in our survey reported a strong willingness to use long-acting, highly-effective, dissolvable PrEP implants.Entities:
Keywords: Discrete choice experiment; HIV; Pre-exposure prophylaxis; South Africa
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35360893 PMCID: PMC9371991 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-022-03658-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Fig. 1ARV-releasing pellet prototype, under development by CONRAD
Fig. 2Process of determining choice task attributes and levels. Note Schematic of Research Phases 1 and 2 adapted from “Developing attributes and attribute-levels for a discrete choice experiment on micro health insurance in rural Malawi” by Abiiro, G., Leppert, G., Mbera, G. et al. 2014, BMC, copyright by BMC
Fig. 3Discrete choice experiment attributes and levels
Sociodemographic characteristics by study population
| Characteristic | Total N = 600, (%) | Adolescent girls N = 201, (%) | Young women N = 200, (%) | Female sex workers N = 199, (%) | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (Mean, SD) | 24.2 (8.0) | 16.1 (1.0) | 25.5 (3.6) | 31.2 (7.7) | < 0.001 |
| Single/not cohabitating | 523 (88.6) | 201 (100.0) | 156 (78.4) | 166 (87.4) | < 0.001 |
| Ever been pregnant | 312 (52.4) | 14 (7.0) | 140 (70.0) | 158 (81.4) | < 0.001 |
| Primary | 201 (33.9) | 53 (26.4) | 2 (2.6) | 23 (11.9) | < 0.001 |
| Secondary | 199 (33.6) | 120 (59.7) | 60 (30.2) | 99 (51.3) | |
| Metric or above | 193 (32.6) | 28 (13.9) | 137 (68.8) | 71 (36.8) | |
| Currently employed | 249 (41.9) | 2 (1.0) | 65 (33.3) | 182 (91.5) | < 0.001 |
| Average monthly income | 8183 (14,651) | 4650 (4455) | 5918 (6246) | 9275 (17,185) | 0.252 |
| Probability poverty index | 55.2 (15.2) | 56.4 (16.5) | 54.0 (16.9) | 55.2 (11.5) | 0.430 |
Attribute preferences from DCE
| Attribute | Level | Utility ratio | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duration of protection | 6 months | Ref | Ref |
| 12 months | 1.07 | (0.94–1.22) | |
| 24 months | |||
| Effectiveness | 70% | Ref | Ref |
| 80% | |||
| 90% | |||
| Side effects | Pain at injection site | ||
| Pain at injection site & headache lasting days | |||
| Pain at injection site & headache lasting for weeks | Ref | Ref | |
| Location of insertion | Buttocks/thigh | Ref | Ref |
| Belly/love handle | 1.06 | (0.91–1.23) | |
| Arm | 1.05 | (0.92–1.20) | |
| Number of insertions | One | ||
| Two | Ref | Ref | |
| Dissolvability | Not dissolvable, surgical removal | Ref | Ref |
| Dissolvable, not removable | 0.93 | (0.81–1.06) | |
| Dissolvable, removable within 1 month |
For dissolvable, removable within 1 month = *p-value < 0.05 For number of insertions, one = ***p-value < 0.001 For side effects, pain at injection site & headache lasting days = **p-value < 0.01 For side effects, pain at injection site = ***p-value < 0.001 For effectiveness at 90% = ***p-value < 0.001 For effectiveness at 80% = ***p-value < 0.001 For duration, 24 months = ***p-value < 0.001
Fig. 4DCE results by population segment