| Literature DB >> 35799121 |
Dvora Leah Joseph Davey1,2,3, Kathryn Dovel4, Susan Cleary5, Nehaa Khadka6, Nyiko Mashele7, Miriam Silliman6, Rufaro Mvududu7, Dorothy C Nyemba7, Thomas J Coates4, Landon Myer7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: HIV incidence among pregnant and postpartum women remains high in South Africa. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) use remains suboptimal in this population, particularly during the postpartum period when women's engagement with routine clinic visits outside PrEP decreases. Key barriers to sustained PrEP use include the need for ongoing contact with the health facility and suboptimal counseling around effective PrEP use.Entities:
Keywords: Breastfeeding; Economic evaluation; PMTCT; Persistence; PrEP; Pre-exposure prophylaxis; Pregnant; Protocol; Randomized control trial; South Africa
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35799121 PMCID: PMC9264672 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-022-13652-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 4.135
Fig. 1Conceptual framework for SCOPE-PP study
SCOPE-PP Step 1 and Step 2 Study populations, Intervention, Outcomes and Hypotheses
| Study | Study Population | Intervention | Outcome | Hypothesis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Step 1: | Persistence biofeedback | PrEP continuation and persistence (urine TFV at 6 months postpartum & verified post hoc via DBS of TFV-DP) | Persistence biofeedback will improve PrEP continuation & persistence by > 15% compared to standard of care (no intervention) in pregnant and early postpartum women | |
| Step 2a: | Composed of ALL women who want to use PrEP but are struggling to engage w/PrEP from Step 1 (EARLY-PREP-P) | Differentiated PrEP delivery (in community pick up points) with HIVST (for participant and partner) Vs. Persistence biofeedback | PrEP continuation and persistence through 12-months follow up per urine TFV (post hoc DBS analysis) | In postpartum women who want to use PrEP but struggle to engage with initial use, PrEP use continues and improves by > 15% differentiated PrEP delivery (in community pick up points) at longer time periods (through 12-months follow up) |
aStep 2 sample size is approximate because the participants will be recruited from the Step 1 and that number will depend on how many want to be in the study and how many discontinue PrEP and/or have poor persistence per urine TFV testing
SCOPE-PP Outcomes, Measures, Data Sources, and Timing (Aims 1 and 2)
| Outcomes | Measures | Data Sources | Follow-up timing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Efficacy of SCOPE-PP | DBS TDF-DP | RCT 1: 6 months RCT 2: 15 months postpartum | |
| DBS TDF-DP | RCT 1: 6 months RCT 2: 15 months postpartum | ||
| Self-reported PrEP persistence &pill count | Quarterly | ||
| RedCap clinical data | Monthly | ||
| Ickovic’ and Meisler’s Conceptual Factors | Evaluate factors associated with PrEP persistence in conceptual model: individual level (including partner PrEP support), facility level, HIV level (partner HIV testing & serostatus) | Quantitative surveys at each visit | Baseline, 1 month, 6 months, 12 months postpartum |
| Acceptability and uptake of intervention | Organizational, providers, woman and partner views on acceptability of SCOPE-PP including HIVST, urine TFV testing for persistence monitoring, and differentiated care | Mixed methods | At 6 months & 12 months follow-up of all participants (survey); IDIs in 20 providers working with PrEP, 30 participants & 30 partners |
| Feasibility of intervention | Organizational, providers, woman and partner views on feasibility & scalability of implementation of SCOPE-PP | Mixed methods surveys | |
| Incremental cost of Scope-PP | Based on micro-costing, evaluate incremental cost per participant of SCOPE-PP from baseline to 6, 12 and 15 months postpartum by trial step | Quantitative surveys at each visit | RCT 1: 6 months RCT 2: 15 months postpartum |
| Incremental cost per improved PrEP continuation and persistence | Using trial-based cost-effectiveness analysis, evaluate incremental cost per improved PrEP continuation and persistence at 6, 12 and 15 months postpartum for SCOPE-PP (integrating step 1 and step 2 trials) | Quantitative surveys at each visit | RCT 1: 6 months RCT 2: 15 months postpartum |
| Incremental cost per DALY averted | Using model-based cost-utility analysis, evaluate incremental lifetime cost and DALYs averted for SCOPE-PP and assess value for money | N/A | N/A (model-based analysis) |
SCOPE-PP Stepped care to optimize pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) effectiveness in pregnant and postpartum women, DALY disability adjusted life year, CFIR Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research, PrEP pre-exposure prophylaxis, HIVST HIV self-testing, TFV-DP tenofovir diphosphate
Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) domains and constructs for SCOPE-PP
| Domain (description) | Construct (description) | Maternal PrEP specific themes | Participant type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Advantage to integration PrEP in ANC services. Advantage of providing self and partner HIVST vs. facility testing, advantage of persistence counseling | Providers, women and partners | ||
| I am confident that I or my colleague in the clinic can integrate PrEP and HIVST into ante- and postnatal care & I am confident that I or my colleagues can follow up on PrEP in pregnant/postpartum women | Providers | ||
| Concerns about cost of integration of HIVST (for women & partners) and PrEP into care | Managers and providers | ||
| Maternal PrEP & HIVST are compatible with the needs of patients at my clinic and outcomes are achievable irrespective of patient SES | Managers, providers, women and partners | ||
| Existing guidelines/policies on maternal PrEP and HIVST | Managers and providers | ||
| Leadership values evidence-based HIV practices such as maternal PrEP and HIVST | Managers and providers | ||
| Maternal PrEP and HIVST for patient and provider are essential parts of HIV prevention of my PMTCT program | Managers and providers | ||
| Awareness of DoH guidelines/policies on maternal PrEP and HIVST & Users’ skilled and provision of PrEP, counseling and HIVST | Managers and providers, women and partners | ||
| It is more suitable to provide maternal PrEP, HIVST and PrEP to PBFW | Managers and providers |
RCT randomized control trial, SCOPE-PP Stepped care to optimize PrEP in pregnancy and postpartum, CFIR Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research, PrEP pre-exposure prophylaxis, HIVST HIV self-testing, TFV-DP tenofovir diphosphate
Study and clinic visits by intervention and standard of care arms in Step 1 of RCT in SCOPE-PP study, Cape Town, South Africa
| RCT Step 1: EARLY PrEP-P | SOC ( | Intervention ( | Steps and measurement |
|---|---|---|---|
In clinic: PrEP offer, standard counseling | In clinic: PrEP offer, standard counseling | In study site (behind clinic): • Consent form • Survey • Reimbursement for time | |
In clinic: PrEP refill and standard counseling, urine testing (no feedback) | In clinic: PrEP refill with urine testing and feedback on PrEP levels in urine | Standard monitoring No reimbursement for time | |
In clinic: PrEP refill and standard counseling, urine testing (no feedback) With standard HIV testing/HIVST | In clinic: PrEP refill with urine testing and feedback on PrEP levels in urine With standard HIV testing/HIVST | In study site: • Blood collection • Survey • Reimbursement for time | |
In clinic: PrEP refill and standard counseling, urine testing (no feedback) With standard HIV testing/HIVST | In clinic: PrEP refill with urine testing and feedback on PrEP levels in urine With standard HIV testing/HIVST | In study site: • Blood collection • Survey • Reimbursement for time | |
In clinic: PrEP refill and standard counseling, urine testing (no feedback) With standard HIV testing/HIVST | In clinic: PrEP refill with urine testing and feedback on PrEP levels in urine With standard HIV testing/HIVST | Standard monitoring No reimbursement for time | |
In clinic: PrEP refill and standard counseling, urine testing (no feedback) With standard HIV testing/HIVST | In clinic: PrEP refill with urine testing and feedback on PrEP levels in urine With standard HIV testing/HIVST | Standard monitoring No reimbursement for time | |
In clinic: PrEP refill and standard counseling, urine testing (no feedback) With standard HIV testing/HIVST | In clinic: PrEP refill with urine testing and feedback on PrEP levels in urine With standard HIV testing/HIVST | In study site: • Blood collection • Survey • Reimbursement for time | |
Study and clinic visits by intervention and standard of care arms in Step 2 of RCT in SCOPE-PP study, Cape Town, South Africa
| Counseling group | Community delivery group | Steps | |
|---|---|---|---|
In clinic: PrEP refill and counseling with urine testing and feedback | At community pick up pointsa: PrEP refill + HIV self testing for monitoring HIV status | In study site (behind clinic): • Consent to new randomization • Survey • Reimbursement | |
In clinic: PrEP refill and counseling with urine testing and feedback | At community pick up pointsa: PrEP refill + HIV self testing for monitoring HIV status | Standard monitoring • No reimbursement for time | |
In clinic: PrEP refill and counseling with urine testing and feedback | In communitya: PrEP refill + HIV self testing for monitoring HIV status | Standard monitoring No reimbursement for time | |
In clinic: PrEP refill and counseling with urine testing and feedback | In communitya: PrEP refill + HIV self testing for monitoring HIV status Referral to continue on PrEP at local clinic | In study site: • Blood collection • Survey • Reimbursement for time | |
aStudy will offer community pick up in local church or hall, depending on participant preference
PrEP pre-exposure prophylaxis, HIVST HIV self-testing, TFV tenofovir diphosphate